The Dr. Hyman Show - My Favorite Supplements for Optimal Health & Longevity | Dr. Mark Hyman
Episode Date: September 27, 2024Most people have no idea they’re missing out on essential nutrients—until it’s too late. In this episode, I expose the hidden truth behind nutrient deficiencies and why supplements are no longer... optional when it comes to your health. Learn which supplements are vital to keep you feeling your best and how to navigate the confusing supplement market with confidence. View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal This episode is brought to you by AG1, Seed, and Essentia. Get your daily serving of vitamins, minerals, adaptogens, and more with AG1. Head to DrinkAG1.com/Hyman and get a year's worth of D3 and five Travel Packs for FREE with your first order. Seed is offering my community 25% off to try DS-01® for themselves. Visit seed.com/hyman and use code HYMAN25 for 25% off your first month of Seed's DS-01® Daily Synbiotic. Get an EXTRA $100 off your mattress purchase, on top of Essentia’s Labor Day Sale of 25% OFF + FREE organic cotton sheets! Head to MyEssentia.com/DrMarkHyman and use code HYMAN at checkout.
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
95% of Americans are deficient in at least one essential nutrient
at the minimum level to prevent a deficiency disease.
This is staggering.
Not how much do you need for optimal health,
but how much do you need just to prevent a deficiency disease like scurvy or rickets?
If you're a regular listener, you know that I often talk about the gut
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Before we jump into today's episode, I'd like to note that while I wish I could help everyone
via my personal practice, there's simply not enough time for me to do this at this scale.
And that's why I've been busy building several passion projects to help you better understand,
well, you. If you're looking for data about your biology, check out Function Health for real-time
lab insights. If you're in need of deepening your knowledge around your health journey,
check out my membership community, Hyman Hive. And if you're looking for curated and trusted
supplements and health products for your routine, visit my website, Supplement Store,
for a summary of my favorite and tested products. Today, we're going to be diving into a crucial topic, the importance of
supplementation and addressing very common and prevalent nutrient deficiencies. It's a staggering
fact that 95% of Americans are deficient in at least one essential nutrient, and globally over
2 billion people face simply correctable nutrient deficiencies.
While macronutrient deficiencies are rare due to their availability in our diets, meaning
protein, fat, and carbohydrates, micronutrient deficiencies, those involving vitamins and
minerals, are far more common and can significantly impact our health.
I mean, I just got to say, vitamins and minerals are freaking remarkable. You know, at the turn of the century, there was diseases like beriberi,
pellagra, rickets, sarophthalmia. And these diseases were from vitamin A deficiency,
B vitamin deficiencies, and they would create severe illness. I mean, just dementia,
severe dermatitis, blindness, rickets. I mean, you name it. And these are corrected with
literally infinitesimally small doses of a compound literally within days. I mean, if you
have scurvy and you don't have enough vitamin C, you're in bad shape. But a few little doses of
vitamin C and you're back to normal. I mean, there is no more powerful miracle drug than vitamins and
minerals at the level of deficiency. And what we're seeing now is something called long latency deficiency diseases,
where we're not like fully, fully, fully always facing severe deficiency diseases,
but we have these things called long latency deficiency diseases that make, for example,
if you have none of vitamin D in the short run and you're really low, you get rickets. But if
you don't have it in the long run, you have a suppressed immune system, you get depression,
you get muscle aches, you get back in fact, even osteoporosis. So
these are very, very different kind of manifestations, but they're really important.
Based on this, we're going to explore some of the most prevalent micronutrient deficiencies,
including iron, vitamin D, magnesium, and omega-3s. These are the big ones. And there's
obviously a lot more like B vitamins and zinc and selenium and so forth. But these affect large portions of the population and they can lead to a whole range of health issues
from a weakened immune system to chronic diseases to even things like dementia and cognitive
decline, and they can mess up our hormones.
I mean, the list goes on and on.
Now, understanding these deficiencies is crucial because unlike overt severe deficiency diseases
like scurvy or rickets, subclinical
deficiencies often go unnoticed but still have these serious long-term consequences. Like I was
saying, these long latency deficiency diseases. In fact, there's an amazing scientific article by
Robert Heaney, we'll put it in the show notes, that describes the whole science behind this idea
of long latency deficiency diseases. He was a vitamin D researcher. Now, even with a well-balanced diet, our modern agricultural practices, our declining soil quality,
our fast-paced lifestyle, our exposure to toxins, our chronic stress, all make it challenging to
obtain the necessary nutrients from food alone. And that's where supplementation comes in. And
it becomes really not just an option, but essential, not just to avoid deficiencies, but to achieve optimal health. And there's a
big difference between how much vitamin D you need, for example, to prevent rickets,
which is 30 units versus how much vitamin D you might need to prevent all the other things we
talked about, like osteoporosis and boosting your immune system and so on, you might need 4,000 to 5,000,
more than 10 times that or 100 times that dose.
So in this episode, we're going to discuss why supplements are necessary in the first
place and why they're so important in today's world, how to navigate the supplement market,
in other words, how do you make sense of what's good or bad out there, and how you can ensure
you're getting the nutrients your body really needs to thrive.
Now, I want to talk about the importance of supplementation and why we need to use
nutritional supplements to address nutrient deficiencies that are widespread. And as I
mentioned before, 95% of Americans are deficient in at least one essential nutrient at the minimum
level to prevent a deficiency disease. This is staggering. Not how much do you need for optimal
health, but how much do you need just to prevent a deficiency disease like scur staggering. Not how much do you need for optimal health, but how much
do you need just to prevent a deficiency disease like scurvy or rickets? And 2 billion people,
as I mentioned, worldwide have at least one nutrient deficiency. It plays a huge role in
infant mortality and chronic illnesses around the world. Now, let's talk about the difference
between macro and micronutrients. Now, macronutrients, you're familiar with carbs,
proteins, fats. Now, it's very unusual in our modern society to have a deficiency in any of these nutrients. Protein is
a common deficiency in the developing world, and you see kids with severe protein malnutrition,
but it's really important to get enough protein. But although we might not have a deficiency,
we still may not be optimal, and I've done podcasts on that, but that's another topic.
Now, micronutrient deficiencies, like vitamins and minerals, are far more common.
And I wanna explain just for a minute
why nutrients are so important,
just so you understand the context here.
When you look at your DNA,
one third of your entire DNA codes for enzymes.
Now, what are enzymes?
Enzymes are catalysts.
They're basically a enzyme or a catalyst
that converts one compound or one molecule
to another molecule in your body.
They're basically the facilitators
of all your biochemical reactions.
And you've got 37 billion trillion chemical reactions
happening every second in your body.
Now, just digest that for a second, right? 37 billion trillion chemical reactions every second in your body. Now just digest that for a second, right? 37 billion trillion
chemical reactions every second. And every single one of those reactions requires an enzyme. And
those enzymes require a cofactor or coenzyme. And guess what, folks? What are the cofactors
and coenzymes? They're vitamins and minerals.
Now, drugs, they affect a single pathway to create a single outcome.
For example, if you have a blood pressure pill,
it's a calcium channel blocker.
It does that one thing.
However, vitamins and minerals,
they might have the effect on hundreds
and hundreds of different enzymes.
So magnesium or folate or other nutrients may have the ability
to affect the function of literally hundreds and hundreds of different chemical reactions.
That's why they create such widespread problems. So just to understand that this is a super
important thing. And based on these genetic differences we have, I said one third of our
DNA codes for enzymes. Based on these genetic variations, different people may need different amounts of nutrients
and may need different forms of nutrients. For example, if you have a gene that is called MTHFR,
it means you can't convert the folate from your food very well into the folate that's active in
your body, 5-methylfolate. So you need to take the preformed version as a
supplement, for example. Or let's say you are somebody who has vitamin D receptor issues and
can't absorb vitamin D well. You might need not 1,000 units of vitamin D a day, you might need
10,000. And so there are a lot of variations in the population. That's why it's important to test,
not guess. And again, that's why I created with my colleagues and friends and co-founders
functionhealth.com to allow you to get all these nutrients we're talking about today tested and
many more. Go to functionhealth.com forward slash mark, and you can find out what's actually going
on. Okay, so let's get started. What are the most common micronutrient deficiencies? Well,
iron. Iron is the most common nutrient deficient globally, affecting about 25% of the global
population.
Now, the consequences include short-term problems like anemia, particularly in preschoolers,
where nearly 50% are deficient if they're not getting iron-fortified foods, right?
So the at-risk groups particularly are vegans.
Almost all the vegans I know and test are iron deficient.
Vegetarians still, menstruating and pregnant women
because they use up a lot of blood in either menstruating or, you know, creating extra blood
for the baby. Vitamin D deficiency also extremely common. And it may have, depending on how you look
and define it, insufficiency or deficiency may affect between 80 to 95% of the population. And
we're going to put all the references in here.
I'm not making this stuff up.
You just have to look at the show notes to get the scientific papers that are reflecting
what I'm talking about here.
Now, while frank deficiency symptoms like rickets are not common today, although they
are sometimes in the developing world, suboptimal levels have significant health impacts.
As I mentioned, suppressed immune system, muscle weakness, fibromyalgia, fatigue, depression, immune dysfunction, and even cardiovascular risk,
cancer risk. I mean, all these things are related to low levels or insufficient levels of vitamin D.
The next big one is magnesium deficiency. Now, this affects about 20% of the population
based on the minimum amount to prevent a deficiency disease, that's 20%
who have overt magnesium deficiency. That's quite serious. Subclinical deficiency could affect up to
80% of the population, which is very important. Because why? Magnesium is crucial for over 600
enzyme reactions affecting every single biological system, affecting overall health and risk of chronic disease. Literally everything from your mental health to your immune health to metabolic health,
diabetes control, muscle function, everything.
Pretty much everything.
Vitamin B12 deficiency is also really common.
About 80 to 90% of vegans and vegetarians may be deficient in vitamin B12 because there's
not any vegetable food, basically. That's how it is. Just fact of life. Now, over 20% of adults may be deficient in vitamin B12 because there's not any vegetable food, basically.
That's how it is.
Just fact of life.
Now, over 20% of adults may be deficient in the vegans because only about 2% of the population
is vegan.
But basically, even the rest of the population, it can be deficient in vitamin B12.
Part of it has to do with our drugs we're taking, like acid blockers.
Part of it has to do with our digestive function and like absorption
in some cases, or just lack of intake, right? Because we weren't eating beach well-rich foods.
Now, what about calcium deficiency? And that's not that common because the body regulates calcium
pretty well from the bones. But what happens is basically if you don't have calcium,
because your blood levels have to be controlled really tightly, it just sucks it all out of your
bones and you get osteoporosis. But a survey in the United States found that about 50% of teenage girls and about 10% of women over 50 and
about less than 22% of teenage boys and men over 50 meet the recommended calcium intake. So a lot
of people don't meet it. And it depends on your age and your sex and so forth. But we need to
make sure we have adequate calcium. But ideally, you want to get it from food.
Calcium-rich foods are really common.
Greens, often seeds.
Sesame seeds are great.
Chia seeds are great.
So there's a lot of ways to get calcium.
You can get it from bones, from a can of sardines, which I like.
But anyway, you probably don't like that.
I like to eat that.
Can of salmon with the bones in.
Again, that's how people living on islands used to get calcium.
Anyway, you can take a little calcium, but I don't think you want to overdo on a calcium because of
problems with calcium affecting the heart and creating other issues. So I'd be careful about
that. Anyway, omega-3 fats are the next one. This is a big one. We don't eat the foods we used to
eat as hunter-gatherers, which are wild foods, or a lot of sea-based foods for
coastal people. Those are very rich in omega-3s, but our modern industrial diet and our lack of
intake of wild fish has really dropped. And so 90% of Americans are not meeting the recommendations
for omega-3 intake, which is one serving of fatty fish at least two times a week. I think that's a
bare minimum, right? And I'm talking about like sardines, herring, mackerel, maybe some wild salmon, anchovies, you know, small fatty fish.
Now, there's a lot of other deficiencies, and this is from a large national study. It's called
the NHANES, or National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. It's a big mumbo-jumbo.
It's an ongoing government study that's been going on for a long, long time that tracks people over decades, tracks their blood work, their health issues. And basically,
they found that 45% of the population is deficient in vitamin A, 46% in vitamin C,
84% in vitamin E. Why? Because it comes from whole grains and nobody eats those. 15% are deficient
in zinc. And why this matters is that these subclinical deficiencies or just frank
deficiencies can lead to really serious health consequences. And they may not have initially
obvious symptoms, but they will ultimately. So what's the truth about supplements? Well,
getting enough vitamins and minerals is not just about preventing deficiency diseases.
Well, that's part of it. They're also essential nutrients to power every aspect of our biology, as I said.
Vitamins and minerals and amino acids
play key roles in a whole set
of biochemical reactions in the body.
As I mentioned, they act as cofactors.
I'm just saying this again
because it's so important to understand.
They literally are the grease that lubricates the wheels
of our massive metabolic and biochemical machinery.
They power metabolism, our detox systems,
our energy production, our antioxidant systems, which all are important for overall health. I
mean, your antioxidants need nutrients to work. For example, you need zinc and copper to activate
and manganese, one of the most important intracellular antioxidants called superoxide
dismutase. So nutrients are key for everything, right? For example, you can't make ATP for energy for your cells without magnesium. If you want to turn tryptophan from your turkey into serotonin, which is good for
your mood, you need B6 for that chemical reaction and you need magnesium and you need folate, right?
So if you have low in those and they're really common to be low in, of course you're going to
be depressed. You want to make thyroid hormones, right? To make thyroid hormone T4, you need iodine. And then to make T3, you need selenium and zinc and vitamin A and vitamin D
to make the thyroid hormone work at the cellular level. So without optimal levels of these essential
nutrients, our biochemistry just can't function properly. And that leads to these low-level
functional imbalances. And they manifest as just feeling crappy, right? Now, I call it feel-like-crap syndrome or FLC. Or worse, they can lead to these long-latency deficiency diseases,
accelerated aging, heart disease, cancer, osteoporosis, depression, and worse. And also,
they lead to immune dysfunction. That's why the elderly often having higher risk of illness,
infection, because they tend to have poor diets. They tend to
have trouble absorbing nutrients in their stomach as they get older. And so they tend to have more
deficiencies. Now, a new study published in the European Journal of Nutrition studied blood levels
of magnesium, really important, my favorite mineral, and homocysteine, which is a measure of
B12 folate and B6 function in the body. And they looked at
these levels in about 172 healthy middle-aged people from Australia. And they found that low
levels of magnesium and high homocysteine were linked to an increase in DNA damage.
Now, what is the minimum RDA for magnesium? It's about 400 milligrams, which is fine. That's a
pretty good amount. But here's the deal. In order to get that much magnesium, you'd have to eat 115 almonds, 7 avocados, and 12
and a half bananas to meet that amount of magnesium.
And that's why supplementing is so important in today's modern world.
There's still some debate about this, but I would say it's largely due to misinformation.
So what are the misconceptions, again,
the misinformation about supplements?
Now, some doctors from top medical institutions
like Harvard and Johns Hopkins
say that basically vitamins are not essential
if you're eating a healthy diet.
And another doctor say,
oh, it just creates expensive urine.
You know, that's nonsense, right?
You say, oh, I'm not gonna drink water
because I'm gonna pee what I don't need out.
Well, your body uses what it needs
and then it gets rid of the rest. That's normal. Now, they believe that a well-balanced diet should provide
all the necessary nutrients without the need for supplementation, but it's just not true.
The reality about modern diets is that we're eating not such a good diet. We're not eating
a healthy, unprocessed, whole foods diet. We're just not. And the prevalence of processed foods, right, 60% of our diet as adults, 67% of kids' diets, that combined with our nutrient-depleted soil,
other stressful lifestyle factors, a load of environmental toxins we have to deal with,
the stress we have, means that even those who strive to eat well might still fall short of
their nutrient needs. Even a diet rich in fruits and
veggies, whole grains, good protein, just all the modern food production methods and environmental
factors just result in nutrient deficiencies, even if you're eating a good diet.
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the code HYMAN at checkout. Where are there examples that supplementation is acceptable
for preventing deficiencies? Well, in the medical community, it's pretty wildly acceptable that
pregnant women should take folic acid or folate from a folate to prevent a terrible birth defect called neural tube defects
or spina bifida and many other problems that can happen during pregnancy. So, you know, we understand
that, yeah, if you're, for example, a pregnant woman or breastfeeding woman, you need more
nutrients, but why don't the rest of us, right? Why is this just siloed to pregnant women? If
folate is essential for pregnant women,
why is it not the same for other nutrients for the general population? Now, the need for essential
nutrients is not limited to pregnancy. That's ridiculous. Everyone can benefit from ensuring
they have optimal levels of vitamins and minerals. Now, our age, our genetic uniqueness, our gender,
physical activity levels, all affect our individual nutrient
requirements. And actually determine what we need to thrive. I don't, you just want to survive. You
want to thrive, right? So how do you know you're deficient in a nutrient? Well, you test, right?
Test, don't guess. And this is part of why I co-founded Function, which helps you get a
comprehensive look at over 110 biomarkers for $.99 a year with twice a year testing.
And we're talking about key nutrients like vitamin D,
magnesium, omega-3s, farin, which is a measure of iron
and other iron status, zinc, selenium.
We do comprehensive hormone testing, lipid testing,
immune markers, and lots more.
And it's quite amazing.
You know, in our cohort, and this is,
I think the first adopters, the earlier adopters
of Function Health are probably a more healthy population. But even within that population, in our cohort, and this is, I think the first adopters, the earlier adopters of function health
are probably a more healthy population. But even within that population, in the few nutrients we
looked at, 67% were deficient in one or more nutrients. Not at the optimal level, right? But
at a true deficiency level. This is frightening to me. Iron, vitamin D, B vitamins related to homocysteine,
67% were low in one or more of these. And not, again, the optimal level. Let's say vitamin D,
what, you know, people had vitamin D under 30 or ferritin under 16, where it should be ferritin
should be 45 or vitamin D should be 45. We need to think differently about our numbers. So know
your numbers, get tested. If you want to jump the line, go to functionhealth.com forward slash mark,
because there's 300,000 people on the wait list. It might take a while. So jump the list with that
special code and check out your numbers. And then of course you need to supplement and retest and
check the levels because you want to see if it's working. Now, we need really a
certain number of nutrients to power our biological systems. For example, we need omega-3 fats for a
healthy brain. Now, omega-3s are so important for brain health and they've been shown to help
prevent cognitive decline like dementia, depression, various mood issues. Why? Because most of our
brain is fat. About 60% of our brain is fat. And 30% is omega-3 fats, right?
And omega-3 fats are hard to get from our diet alone,
especially for vegans, vegetarians,
and those who do not consume fatty fish regularly.
I'm talking about people who are not eating
two or three servings a week of sardines.
Like that's probably most of America.
And that's why we need supplements.
What about other nutrients?
Zinc,
for example, is key for male fertility. It plays a key role in reproductive health,
particularly improving sperm motility. In other words, how fast your sperm and how well your
sperm can swim. And that enhances fertility. And it also leads to the higher probability of
fertilizing the egg, right? Because if it can't swim, it ain't getting there. It's also essential
food for wound repair. Zinc is really important for immune function, for your antioxidant defenses, for
DNA synthesis, for removing heavy metals from your body. What other nutrients are important? Well,
iodine. I see a lot of iodine deficiency because people are stopping iodized salt, which is how
people were getting their iodine because iodine mostly comes from seaweed or fish. So if you're not eating that, you're probably not getting enough, right? Unless you're eating sushi
all the time, but then you're probably getting heavy metal poisoning. So that's another thing.
So basically you can't win for losing. But anyway, iodine is really important for thyroid health.
It's really key because it helps you produce thyroid hormone that regulates metabolism. When
we say T3 or T4, we're talking about how many iodine molecules. T4
is four iodines, T3 is three iodines. And thyroid hormone regulates metabolism, energy levels,
overall growth of your body, everything. And people have trouble getting iodine through diet,
especially if they avoid, as I mentioned, iodized salt and seafood. So it's really important to
make sure you have enough iodine to maintain healthy thyroid
function and prevent thyroid related conditions like hypothyroidism and you can actually eat
seaweed i like those uh seaweed snacks those nori snacks that's going to help you too so
selenium also really important for many things it's important for thyroid function
for detoxification uh for immune health uh it's an antioxidant. It's a powerful antioxidant. It plays a key role in
immune health. It powers a particular enzyme. Remember nutrients, enzymes? One of these enzymes
is called glutathione peroxidase. Not so important to remember, but glutathione is the body's main
antioxidant. It's main detoxifier and one of the most powerful anti-inflammatories in your body.
And it's made from the food we eat, but we need to have selenium to activate this enzyme called
glutathione peroxidase, which is our most potent antioxidant enzyme, which protects our cells from
oxidative stress and helps our immune system function, we need to have selenium to actually
make that enzyme work. And there's a lot of selenium deficiency out there. And if you have
adequate selenium, it supports your body's ability to fend off infections, maintains immune health
also, and of course helps you detoxify. But it's hard to get enough from diet, making supplementation
pretty important. Now let's sort of take a kind of 30,000 foot view
and kind of look a little more in detail on what's essential for everybody, not just for
specific populations. Now certain supplements are recommended for specific populations like
pregnant women, but supplementation can benefit a much bigger group of people. Now getting enough
of these nutrients is universal. We need them.
There's no option. They're called essential vitamins and minerals. Vitamin means vital
amine, which means vital to life, right? It's how they kind of came up with the name. Now,
whether it's to support cognitive function, reproductive health, immune resilience,
overall well-being, we need them. So how do we
close that nutrient gap? Well, even individuals with healthy diets require additional nutrients
to achieve optimal health. And supplementation is going to help you close that gap and support
lifelong health and vitality. And this goes for both essential nutrients and also non-essential,
or what I call conditionally essential nutrients. We still need them. You might not get efficiency
disease, but I think there are things that do optimize our health and are required for optimal health.
So what are essential nutrients? Well, these are nutrients the body can't produce on its own.
They got to be obtained from your diet. Now, because they're hard to get from diet,
that's why you have to supplement. It's that simple. And what are examples of these? Amino
acids. So you have to
eat protein and you need the right amount of protein. Protein is necessary for muscle repair,
enzyme production, hormone synthesis, many, many critical body functions. It's actually the
only nutrient we need in extremely large amounts. Vitamins and minerals are small amounts,
fatty acids, small amounts, carbohydrates, not essential at all. But protein is the only nutrient we need in large, large amounts. And we also need
a lot of other nutrients like omega-3 fats, vitamin A, C, K, D, E, minerals like calcium, potassium,
zinc. I'm not going through the whole list, but basically we need all the essential vitamins and
minerals. Not an option to not get them. Now, what are non-essential nutrients?
Well, it's kind of misleading.
You know, the name is not really right.
We still need these for health.
The fact that they're called non-essential just means our bodies can make them usually.
Now, examples include non-essential amino acids because they produce them on their own
or they're derived from other amino acids.
Cholesterol, for example, is something we need, but our body makes it.
Creatine, again, something you can supplement with,
but our body also needs.
Now, in certain situations, chronic illness, stress,
poor diet, you might need a supplement
with these other non-essential nutrients
to assure optimal levels
and correct your reverse symptoms, right?
For example, creatine's really important.
I use it every day because it helps build muscle.
While drugs often come with side effects and risks, supplements supplements when used properly, and I say properly and correctly,
they're generally pretty safe and they're effective in supporting health and filling
nutrient gaps. We don't have drug deficiencies. We have nutrient deficiencies, right? The human
body is perfectly designed. When it has what it needs, it stays in balance. And when it doesn't,
it gets out of balance. But I'm going to tell you
something. Nobody has a drug deficiency. Nobody has a statin deficiency, a Prozac deficiency,
an Adderall deficiency, or any drug deficiency, right? We're using these drugs to kind of
interrupt or block or inhibit some natural process that we hope will improve some outcome.
But we can be deficient in essential vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients that we need for optimal health. And this is really where supplementation
is so important. Listen, we also have a lot of other deficiencies beside vitamin and mineral
deficiencies, right? We have nature deficiency, connection and community deficiency, sunshine
deficiency, exercise deficiency. And those are all medicines, right? Those are not prescriptions
you're going to get from your doctor's office. There's a lot of choices, a lot of misinformation, makes it hard for the average consumer to make
informed purchasing decisions. I mean, people basically are aware that they need supplements,
but they're not sure which ones to get or what to buy or what to take or which dose.
And this is why we need transparency and we need a way to determine the quality of what we're
taking, some quality insurance. So let's talk
about transparency. Consumers need access to reliable information about the contents
and the sourcing of the supplements and the raw ingredients. They need clear labeling.
They need third-party testing certifications. And I use companies, for example, that will test
all the raw materials before they go into the pill and they'll test it for purity and the potency.
Then once they put it in the pill, they'll ret it for purity and the potency. Then once they
put it in the pill, they'll retest it to make sure it wasn't contaminated and it exactly says
what's on the label is in the bottle. If it is 100 milligrams of vitamin C, it got 100 milligrams
of vitamin C and nothing else. And it doesn't have any contaminants. You want to look for quality
assurance. Look for supplements that have been independently tested by third parties like the NSF, International, USP, Pharmacopoeia, or Consumer Lab.
These certifications really help ensure that products meet standards of safety, purity,
and potency.
Also, education is really important.
It's essential for consumers to be educated about the importance of choosing quality supplements
and be skeptical of products that may seem too good to be true, right?
Everybody out there is hawking something.
And it's frustrating for me as a doctor because I use supplements scientifically.
I've done my homework to look at what works, what doesn't work.
I've looked at the literature.
I've visited factories of the companies that I use and looked at their manufacturing processes,
looked at the quality control.
I understand what works,
what doesn't. And it's just kind of sad that it's such a messy place because they're so effective
for so many people if you choose the right ones and you do the right things. Now, I receive a high
volume of inquiries from my patients and my community about where to buy supplements and
where to get quality supplements. And I understand there's a lot of confusion about what to take, why you should take it, where to get them. And there's
a gap in the market for knowing where to find high quality, reliable supplements. Should you
go to Costco? Should you go to your grocery store, the drug store? Should you go to some
random supplement shop? I wanted my patients as a doctor to be sure that they took the most
effective supplements, the ones that had been tested, that manufactured properly, that have
science behind them. And so I created something years ago, which is an online supplement store.
I want to create a highly curated selection. It's not everything. It's not like 30,000 products.
It's a few hundred of the best products in all categories that are highly curated, that are highly bioavailable,
that are at the right doses, and that are effective and that don't have a lot of additives
and fillers and preservatives and chemicals and dyes. And I really made sure that these companies
follow third-party testing and look for environmental toxins, for contaminants, for the bioavailability
of the ingredients, for the forms of the ingredients. And so basically I created a
trustworthy sort of vetted supplements that my patients and my community can use if they want.
I'm not attached to it. You can get your supplements where you want, but I want a place
where people I know can go and feel confident. And each product is hand-selected by our clinical team, not just by me at the Altra Wellness Center. We have a very rigorous
selection process. We have stringent standards for purity and effectiveness. We choose brands
that are best in class in terms of manufacturing. There's something called GMP, which is good
manufacturing practices or even pharmaceutical practices. We pick things that are backed by
scientific data that have a proven history of efficacy and potency
bioavailability safety and all the products are third-party tested for active ingredients and
contaminants and of course they're going to be free of preservatives fillers binders allergens
colors i mean we don't mean like neon blue pills in there okay and then how do you know what's right
for you so once you kind of figure out where to get it and you kind of understand the science,
what do you need for you?
Well, everybody's unique.
Everybody requires a tailored supplement regimen.
Now, there's basics for everybody for sure,
but we can modify things based on testing
and history and your medical needs,
but there's some foundational supplements
that everybody needs.
And what are they?
It's a multivitamin and mineral, vitamin D, vitamin D3 in particular, magnesium, and omega-3
fats, and probably probiotics for most of us. This is a set of foundations for health. I call it
foundations for health, right? And on my website, I actually have a symptom questionnaire that helps
you get more personalized supplement recommendations based on your goals and your health.
The link is in the show notes for sure.
Now, I have targeted supplement stacks,
which I've used in my practice,
which help various health goals,
like blood sugar balance, thyroid health, brain health,
heart health, and so forth.
And the link for that is also in the show notes.
Okay, so what do you do
when you want to start a new supplement regimen?
Well, I recommend tracking how you're doing, right?
Don't just randomly do stuff, right? Track your symptoms. Keep a sense of how you feel.
Keep a health journal monitor. Any changes in overall sense of well-being after starting
something new so you know what's working. And for personalized diet, supplement, and lifestyle
protocols, you know, my team at the Health and Wellness Center is available. Like we have great
nutritionists. We have seven nutritionists. We have seven nutritionists.
We have five physicians.
This is what we've done for the last 25 years together.
You can find the link to the show notes for the practice.
It's ultrawellnesscenter.com.
It's easy to remember.
Sometimes guidance and personalization is helpful.
Check out your labs at functionhealth.com,
forward slash mark.
You'll learn all your nutrient levels.
Hopefully, that was helpful.
It's a long discussion, but in today's world, even with the best diet, you know, it's
just hard to get all the essential nutrients our bodies need. And supplementation is really
essential for filling these gaps and ensuring our bodies function optimally. Now, while pharma drugs,
as I mentioned, often focus on managing symptoms, supplements aim to optimize function and achieve and maintain optimal health by addressing
nutrient deficiencies and optimizing the body's natural processes, right? Because the dose you
need for a deficiency disease is different than you need for optimal health. Now, the supplement
industry can be overwhelming. It for sure can be confusing, but by choosing high quality,
third-party tested products,
you can ensure you're getting what you need without the risks of contaminants or ineffective ingredients.
Now, as we wrap up today's episode, I hope you've gained a much deeper understanding
of why supplementation is so important today.
We've covered how widespread nutrient deficiencies can impact our health in subtle yet significant
ways, and why even the best diets
might fall short in providing all the essential nutrients our bodies need. As I mentioned with
modern agricultural practices, environmental toxins, and more depleting our nutrient quality
of our food, unfortunately, supplementation has become a really crucial tool for creating and
maintaining optimal health. Now remember, addressing these nutrient
gaps isn't just about preventing deficiency. It's about ensuring your body has everything it needs
to function its best. Remember, 37 billion, billion chemical reactions, and every one of those needs a
cofactor or coenzyme, which are nutrients, okay? Whether it's supporting your immune system or
improving cognitive function or preventing
chronic disease, the right supplements can make a profound difference in your overall well-being.
I take a bunch every day. I hope you're going to start. Thanks again for joining me today and see
you next Friday for another juicy episode of Health Bites. Thanks for listening today. If you
love this podcast, please share it with your friends and family. Leave a comment on your own
best practices on how you upgrade your health and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
And follow me on all social media channels at Dr. Mark Hyman. And we'll see you next time
on The Doctor's Pharmacy. For more information on today's episode, please check out my new
video and audio podcast, Health Hacks. It airs every Tuesday and includes a more detailed
breakdown of these Friday Health Bites episodes.
I'm always getting questions about my favorite books, podcasts, gadgets, supplements, recipes, and lots more.
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These are the things that have helped me on my health journey, and I hope they'll help you too. Again, that's drhyman.com forward slash Mark's Picks. Thank you again,
and we'll see you next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy. This podcast is separate from my
clinical practice at the Health and Wellness Center and my work at Cleveland Clinic and
Function Health, where I'm the chief medical officer. This podcast represents my opinions
and my guests' opinions,
and neither myself nor the podcast endorses the views or statements of my guests.
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If you're looking for your help in your journey,
seek out a qualified medical practitioner. You can come see us at the
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