Think back to the days of taking your Flintstones chewable vitamins. Your parents told you to take them because they would make you strong, and keep you healthy. The same can be said for the multivitamins of today. While taking a multivitamin may not be as fun as biting off Dino’s head, multivitamins can have serious health benefits.
Overall well-being: Taking a multivitamin is a way to improve you overall physical and mental well-being. When you take a multivitamin you not only receive the individual benefits of all the vitamins and minerals, but also the benefits of the vitamins and minerals working together at the same time. Research has shown that multivitamins can improve your overall health by improving brain function and even digestion.
Energy boost: By taking a multivitamin you won’t get an energy boost in the traditional sense, because multivitamins do not create energy. However, multivitamins aid in other processes that do give you energy. Multivitamins provide the body with energy because many of the vitamins contained in them are required for the chemical reactions that produce energy. Carbohydrates, fats, and proteins release energy as enzymes break them down, and vitamins assist the enzymes in this process.
Disease prevention: Multivitamins can be an excellent ally in disease prevention. They can work to build up your immune system to fight off disease. Taking a multivitamin can also prevent vitamin deficiency. Many diseases are caused by mineral and vitamin deficiencies. Heart disease and heart attacks can be attributed to a deficiency in copper, selenium, and calcium. Blood disorders can be attributed to a deficiency of iron, and some cancers have been linked to a vitamin E deficiency.
Pregnancy benefits: The benefits for taking a multivitamin before, during, and after pregnancy are well documented. Some research has shown that taking a multivitamin before trying to conceive will help get one’s body healthy and prepared for caring a baby. During pregnancy prenatal vitamins are essential to keep the mother and the baby healthy. Studies have shown that multivitamins containing folic acid help to prevent birth defects like spina bifida. After pregnancy, mothers should take a multivitamin to maintain their energy levels and proper nutrition, especially if they are breastfeeding.
Help for the elderly: As one enters the sixty-five and above age bracket it is important to consider taking a multivitamin. Studies have shown that a vitamin D deficiency has been linked to the development of Alzheimer’s disease. In addition, multivitamins have been shown to be beneficial toward reducing lung infections for the elderly, as well as reducing hip conditions that can result in fractures.
While it should be made clear that vitamins are most beneficial when they are found in their natural forms in food, taking a multivitamin can be beneficial to your heath by ensuring that you receive the recommended daily vitamin intake. When taken properly, multivitamins can aid in disease prevention, provide an energy boost, and improve overall health and well-being. Multivitamins can also be tailored to treat specific conditions, or for specific groups like pregnant women and the elderly. Before beginning any vitamin regimen please consult your physician or other health care professional.
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Hi Kimberly I’m back!
I hit the submit button and noticed the spelling errors in my response to your post. My apologies to your readers. Some folks might be curious about glutathione as an immune system booster. However, after reading my post, they might wonder how effective it is for spelling. Ahhh well it’s 5:30 in the morning. I trust I’ll be forgiven for the typos. My spelling improves after breakfast.
Thank you for your well-written post.
Daniel
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Thank you Kimberly for this very well-written article. It is thorough and yet easy to read. It gives the essence of the subject matter and creates a desire to learn more.
The subject of wellness can be intimidating as there are so many variables that work together to build a healthy individual. There can be a tedency for experts, in each contributing field of health, to claim that theirs is the miracle solution. My intuition is that many elements work in synergy with just the right balance to contribute to health.
As you eloquently put it, vitamins have an important place in the mix.
For the last 2 years I have been nourishing my glutathione levels. Glutathione is known as the body’s master antioxidant. It is present in every cell of your body. Glutathione frees up the vitamins so they can do what they have been designed to do. It optimizes their natural potential. It empowers the vitamins to repeatedly go back into body’s battlefield and get rid of free radicals which weaken your immune system. Why? Because among many functions Glutathione acts as a detoxifier.
More could be said on this. However, I am certain that you already know much about this subject.
If you think this could be useful to your readers they can go to http://www.immunesystemwellness.com where this theme is elaborated.
Once again, thank you as I have benefited from what you have explained in this post.
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There truly are many benefits of taking a multivitamin! After reading this artile I’m really thinking that I should start doing so!
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It’s all well and good saying that there are benefits from taking multivitamins including this that and the other, and even saying that “research proves that ___” but if you don;t give references to back up these claims then how do we know that this is even the slightest bit accurate?
There is a lot of evidence to suggest that there is minimal or no health benefits from taking multivitamins. I shall presume that this will not be published seeing as it goes against what you seem to believe.
Thank you,
Daniel.
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Please excuse me for not refrencing my own work after complaining that the article itself didnt have a single reference in it.
There was a very large study done by a Cancer group in the USA (cannot remember the name) which followed over 100,000 women of varying races over approx. 8 years and only found 1 small benefit, the women who took multivitamins which had high levels of B vitamins and vit c were less likely to have a heart attack.
http://www.fhcrc.org/about/ne/news/2009/02/09/multivitamins.html
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