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    Do You Really Know What's In Your Vitamins?

    Date: 2018-04-03

    How well do you really know what is in your vitamins? Are they full of synthetics? Or are they whole foods? There's a few different types of vitamins, so which is best for you?

    Whole Food Vitamins

    If the vitamins and/or minerals in the product -

    1. made from raw materials that DO occur in nature (e.g. algae, fruits, vegetables, herbs, spices)
    2. from raw materials that can be naturally rich in those vitamins / minerals
    3. from raw materials that are NOT genetically modified
    4. made from raw materials that do NOT include petroleum by-products or other industrial chemicals and solvents
    5. are full-spectrum concentrated to contain the naturally-occurring vitamins and minerals along with co-factors and other bioactive compounds
    6. are in a form that is highly bioavailable and the body recognizes as food

    Note: Regardless of whether or not the product contains other ingredients (e.g. herbs, herbal extracts, fruit powders, vegetable powders, enzymes, probiotics, green powders), it must be considered a whole-food multivitamin product for the purposes of labeling and marketing.

    Acceptable terms to describe the multivitamin product: Whole-food Multivitamin, Whole-food Multivitamin / Multimineral, Food-sourced, Food-based

    Acceptable, but NOT recommended terms to describe the multivitamin product: Natural (because there is currently no universally accepted definition of natural), Food-created / Food-grown (because these are made-up words that have no formal definition).

    Food-Sourced Vitamins

    1. made from raw materials that DO occur in nature (e.g. algae, fruits, vegetables, herbs, spices)
    2. are from raw materials that are known to be naturally rich in those vitamins / minerals
    3. made from raw materials that are NOT genetically modified
    4. are from raw materials that do NOT include petroleum by-products or other industrial chemicals and solvents
    5. are standardized to contain the naturally-occurring vitamins and minerals in a form that the body recognizes as food
    6. may contain some of the naturally-occurring co-factors

    Note: Regardless of whether or not the product contains other ingredients (e.g. herbs, herbal extracts, fruit powders, vegetable powders, enzymes, probiotics, green powders), it is consider a food-source multivitamin product for the purposes of labeling and marketing.

    Acceptable terms to describe the multivitamin product: Multivitamin, Multimineral, Food-sourced, Food-based

    Acceptable, but DO NOT recommend these terms to describe the multivitamin product: Natural (because there is currently no universally accepted definition of natural), Food-created / Food-grown (because these are made-up words that have no formal definition).

    Cultured Vitamins

    If the vitamins and/or minerals in the product -

    1. made from raw materials that do NOT occur in nature
    2. are from raw materials that are NOT known to be naturally rich in those vitamins / minerals
    3. made from raw materials that may be genetically modified
    4. are synthesized from petroleum by-products or other industrial chemicals and solvents
    5. are cultured / grown in yeast and/or probiotic media along with other co-nutrients
    6. may have “co-factors” or “co-nutrients” that are “synthetic” “added” and cultured with the vitamins and minerals; in other words, co-factors are NOT naturally-occurring

    Note: Even if the product contains other ingredients (e.g. herbs, herbal extracts, fruit powders, vegetable powders, enzymes, probiotics, green powders), it must be considered a cultured multivitamin product for the purposes of labeling and marketing.

    Acceptable terms to describe the multivitamin product: Multivitamin, Multimineral, Cultured, Co-enzymated (if the appropriate co-factors are present)

    Unacceptable terms to describe the multivitamin product: Natural, Food-based, Food-sourced, Food-created, Food-grown, Whole-food, or any combination thereof. In fact, companies must NOT use any terms that have the potential to imply to the consumer that the vitamins and/or minerals in the product are from raw materials that occur in nature or that they are in a form that the body will readily recognize as food.

    Synthetic Vitamins

    If the vitamins and/or minerals in the product -

    1. made from raw materials that do NOT occur in nature
    2. are from raw materials that are NOT known to be naturally rich in those vitamins / minerals
    3. made from raw materials that may be genetically modified
    4. are synthesized from petroleum by-products or other industrial chemicals and solvents
    5. are in synthetic, isolated, fractionated form
    6. come with or without co-factors; when co-factors are present, they are also in synthetic form

    Note: Even if the product contains other ingredients (e.g. herbs, herbal extracts, fruit powders, vegetable powders, enzymes, probiotics, green powders), it must be considered a synthetic multivitamin product for the purposes of labeling and marketing.

    Acceptable terms to describe the multivitamin product: Multivitamin, Multimineral, Co-enzymated, Chelated

    Unacceptable terms to describe the multivitamin product: Natural, Food-based, Food-sourced, Food-created, Food-grown, Whole-food, or any combination thereof. In fact, companies may NOT use any terms that have the potential to imply to the consumer that the vitamins and/or minerals in the product are derived from raw materials that occur in nature or that they are in a form that the body will readily recognize as food.

    Source: http://www.nutrigold.com/guide-to-multivitamins/

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