Pet Food Manufacturers Comparison Chart
Dairy Ingredients in Pet Foods (Colostrum, Milk, Whey, Cheese, Yogurt)
Rationale for Dentatreatâ„¢
Rationale For Equine Dietâ„¢ and Supplements
Probiotic Supplementation
Biotic pH- and pH+
Rationale For Nutritious Oils
Clinical Veterinary Nutrition
Omega-3 Spectrum Dry
Vitamin Basics DSM
Oxidation: The Unspoken Danger in Processed Pet Foods
The Truth About Pet Foods
Rationale for Archetype Diets
Wyscin and Other Raw Food Safety Innovations at Wysong
Wysong's Master Key To Health
Does America Owe an Apology to its Pets
How to Apologize to Your Pet
Welcome - Wysong Pet Health and Nutrition
The Safety of Vitamins and Minerals in Pet Foods
Vitamin C in Pet Foods
Vitamin D in Pet Foods
Vitamin K in Pet Foods
Salt in Pet Foods
Yeast in Pet Foods
Methionine in Cat Foods
Montmorillonite Clay in Pet Foods
Mung Bean Sprouts in Pet Foods
Probiotics and Enzymes in Pet Foods
Proteinates in Pet Foods
The Soy in Pet Foods Myth
Taurine in Cat Foods
Turmeric in Pet Foods
Kelp in Pet Foods
Lecithin in Pet Foods
Limestone in Pet Foods
Meats in Pet Foods
Methionine in Pet Foods
Enterococcus Faecium in Pet Foods
Fish Oil in Pet Foods
Flax Seeds in Pet Foods
Fruits and Vegetables in Pet Foods
Garlic in Pet Foods
Poultry (Chicken) Giblets in Pet Foods
Grape Seed Extract in Pet Foods
Guar Gum in Canned Pet Foods
Corn and Soy in Pet Foods
Di Calcium Phosphate (DCP) in Pet Foods
Digests in Pet Foods
Ecklonia Cava in Pet Foods
Wysong Pet Food Ingredients Explained
Animal Plasma in Pet Foods
Artichoke in Pet Foods
Aspergillus in Pet Foods
Black Pepper in Pet Foods
Bugs, Mice and Grass as Pet Food Ingredients
Carageenan in Pet Foods
Chitin in Pet Foods
Citric Acid in Pet Foods
'Real Chicken' in Pet Foods
Fluff, Puff, and Smoke in the Pet Food Industry
Irritable Bowel Syndrome in Pets
Pet Foods and Bird Flu
High Protein Pet Foods and Kidney Disease
Dog and Cat Urinary Problems
Wysong Prevention and Therapy Guide
Allergen Free Pet Foods
Cold-Processed Canned Pet Food
Pet Foods Developed by Vets, Breeders, etc.
Grain Free Pet Food
Pet Foods Without Added Vitamins and Minerals
Tapioca in Pet Food
Are Meat By-Products in Pet Foods Bad?
Why Feed Any Processed Pet Foods?
Animal Testing and Pet Food Feeding Trials
Pet Nutrition is a Serious Health Matter
Large Breed Puppy Foods
Can Pets Consume Raw Bones?
Should Pets be Vegetarians?
Should Pets be Vegans?
Euthanized Pets as a Pet Food Ingredient
Rodents as Pet Food Ingredients
Rabbit vs. No Rabbit in Pet Foods
Breed Specific Pet Foods
22 Pet Food Fallacies
GMO Ingredients in Pet Foods
Diet Guides for Pet Health Conditions
How Important is Caloric Content in Pet Food?
The Pet Food Ingredient Game
Can Pet Health be Simple?
What are the Healthier Grains?
Raw Pet Food Deceptions Exposed
The 'Food Allergies Are Cured...' Myth
The Challenge of Properly Diagnosing Pet Food Ingredient Allergies
The 'Don't Feed Your Pet Table Scraps' Myth
The 'Don't Feed Your Pet Bones' Myth
The 'Exotic Pet Food Ingredients Mean Good Nutrition' Myth
Pet Food Toxins
Why You Should Not Rely On Pet Food Ranking and Pledges
The "Order of Pet Food Ingredients" Myth
Should You Feed Raw To Your Pet?
The Case Against Raw Frozen Pet Foods
Does 'Organic Pet Food' Mean Healthy?
Wysong Pet Foods Preservation Methods
Why are Wysong Pet Food Bags Small?
Reusing Wysong Pet Food Packaging
Why Does Wysong Make Formulation And Ingredient Changes?
Why Wysong Pet Foods Are Not Always Uniform
Wysong Pet Food Can Linings
The 100% Complete Pet Food Myth
The Real Problem in Pet Feeding
Does Your Pet Need a % of Something?
How to Rotate Wysong Pet Diets
Why Intermittent and Varied Pet Feeding
Pet Foods for Both Canine and Feline
Combining Raw Foods and Wysong Pet Diets
Fresh and Raw Pet Diets
Wysong Feeding Recommendations for Finicky Cats
How to Use Wysong Human Supplements for Pets
Dry Matter Analysis of Wysong Dry Diets
Dry Matter Analysis of Wysong Supplements
Wysong Pet Foods Processing Methods
Dry Matter Analysis of Wysong True Non-Thermalâ„¢ Raw and Canned Diets
Archetype Diet Differences
Archetype Special Features
Rx Diet Regulations
Pet Inoculant Uses
What Wysong Pet Diets to Begin With?
How to Transition to Wysong Pet Foods
Wysong Pet Foods Feeding Amount Guidelines
Wysong Pet Food Quality Control
Rationale for Feline Diets
Special Wysong Pet Food Features
About Wysong Healthy & Holistic Pet Food
Wysong as a Holistic Company
Comparing Pet Foods Based Upon What Matters
How To Choose Healthy Pet Foods
Ingredient Sourcing
Wysong Media
 

The Safety of Vitamins and Minerals in Pet Foods

Dr. Wysong

Periodically a medical journal will announce a new study proving that vitamins and minerals are dangerous at most, and useless at best. The popular media, supported by Big Pharma advertising dollars, is more than eager to jump right on this bandwagon.

Since over half the US population continues to take supplements, and essentially the whole population continues to eat cereals and feeds pet foods that are fortified, the public is not buying it. People know intuitively that the modern processed diet consisting of chemicalized, genetically modified, and industrially mined crops (land replenished with only NPK fertilizer) is inadequate for best health.

Facts revealed in tens of thousands of scientific journals bear this out as well. For example:

  • Journal of the American Medical Association: Multivitamin supplements reduce cancer risk by eight percent.
  • International Journal of Cancer: Just 10 ng/ml increase in serum vitamin D levels was associated with a 15 percent reduction in colorectal cancer incidence and a 11 percent reduction in breast cancer incidence.
  • American Heart Journal: Each 20 micromole/liter (μmol/L) increase in plasma vitamin C was associated with a nine percent reduction in heart failure mortality.
  • International Journal of Cancer: Gamma-tocotrienol, found in natural vitamin E preparations, decreases prostate tumor formation by 75 percent.
  • International Journal of Cancer: 300 IUs of vitamin E per day reduces lung cancer risk by 61 percent...
  • American Journal of Preventive Medicine: a serum 25(OH)D level of more than 33 ng/mL was associated with a 50 percent lower risk of colorectal cancer.
  • American Journal of Clinical Nutrition: after four years of follow up, cancer-free survival was 77 percent higher in women who received 1,100 IU vitamin D and 1,450 mg calcium per day, compared to those who received either a placebo or calcium by itself. The link between vitamin D deficiency and cancer has been tested and confirmed in more than 200 epidemiological studies, and more than 2,500 laboratory studies.
This paltry list does no justice to the overwhelming evidence. Regular readers of my newsletters know this. You can also subscribe to the peer reviewed Orthomolecular Medicine News Service for more documented evidence.

Due to the undeniable facts, even the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2002 reversed its long-standing anti-vitamin stance based on a review of 30 years' worth of scientific papers and recommended daily multivitamin supplementation for all adults. Unfortunately, the public is not made aware of this because most MDs don't have time to read such things, and the media tends to ignore any information that diminishes the profitability of their Big Pharma advertisers.

The safety of supplements enjoys more proof than any medical intervention that has ever been devised. Since 2008, the supplement industry has been required to report adverse events to the FDA's adverse effects reporting (AER) system. For the year 2008, 1,080 dietary supplement AERs were reported

Now that might sound like a lot, but consider that these reports could be due to anything, including overdosing, poor quality, allergic and sensitivity reactions, or to something else the person was doing or consuming. This is not controlled, meaning the reports are not screened to eliminate all the variables but the supplement. In data from the US National Poison Data System's annual report in 2010, which tracked 57 U.S. poison centers, there were zero deaths attributable to supplements.

There are about 160 million dog, cat, bird, and horse pets in the US eating vitamin and mineral fortified foods. At an average of two meals each day, and not including supplements, that would equal about 112 billion doses per year–without one fatality.

Now the same media and medical community that wants to scare the public to death about supplements, is essentially silent about the number one killer, modern medicine and its drug juggernaut.

During the same time period that the above supplement AERs were accumulated, there were 526,527 prescription drug AERs and 26,517 vaccine AERs. That is about 500 times more than for supplements. And since about the same number of people take supplements as prescription drugs, the contrast is real.

For comparison, pharmaceuticals cause more than 150,000 deaths per year. (Compare this to the 10,000 deaths per year from illegal street drugs.) That's the equivalent of four 737 jet airliners crashing every day killing everyone on board. If one airliner crashes in a year, the media will beat the story to death for weeks. But not a word about the hundreds of thousands dying at the hands of drugs. This is not to mention the two million people per year who suffer from adverse effects of these drugs.

FDA-approved drugs cause 80 percent of poison fatalities each year. Poison control centers report 100,000 calls, 56,000 emergency room visits, and 2,600 hospitalizations due to prescription drugs. And don't think over the counter drugs are safe either. Nearly 500 deaths occur each year just from acetaminophen (Tylenol).

The European Union reports that pharmaceutical drugs are 62,000 times as likely to kill you as dietary supplements. But even that is not fair since no deaths occur from taking quality supplements at recommended levels.

Not only is nothing being said about this, the public and its pandering politicians are willing to spend the economy into oblivion to make access to these drugs as widespread and free as possible.

At the same time, essentially no harm–but considerable benefit–comes to anyone taking quality vitamins and minerals at recommended levels.

Clearly, those who wish to alarm the public about vitamins and minerals are either misinformed, or purposely misleading to create a market of the gullible or to protect an economic interest.

Until such time as all of us return to nature, naked outside in a pristine environment eating foods right from the vine or on the hoof grown there, supplements are a wise insurance policy.