With all the choices, it's no wonder half of multivitamin users in a new, nationally representative Consumer Reports telephone survey expressed some doubt that they were taking the right product ...
But sometimes a conservative approach is justified. For example, it wasn't that long ago that researchers thought folic-acid supplements might protect the heart or prevent cancer, a promise that ...
Consumer Reports received a two-year grant from the fund to educate the public about dietary supplements. Beginning in November 2010, Consumer Reports began posting articles, news, and blogs about ...
In fact, the FDA issued a consumer advisory ... to overdose even on beneficial vitamins and minerals. Avoid any product that is claimed to contain "megadoses." Report problems.
Consumer Reports says: For the vast majority, the best way to get vitamins is through your diet. Claim: DHEA supplements prevent illness and improve energy Reality: Store shelves are lined with ...
Tainted dietary supplements have accounted for slightly ... In a survey of 1,022 U.S. adults conducted in May by the Consumer Reports National Research Center, 47 percent thought that the ...
We bought the supplements online or from stores in ... The deep-tissue variety got high marks in a 2010 survey of Consumer Reports online readers who tried it for osteoarthritis.
Krill-oil supplements were statistically more effective ... (June 11, 2012, update: Representatives for Neptune Technologies informed Consumer Reports that the June 8, 2012, FDA import alert ...