Reasons To Choose Non GMO Vitamins And Supplements

By Ina Hunt


Today it is more important than ever to know the source of products you use. This is especially true if you want non GMO vitamins and supplements. The proliferation of genetically modified foods in America and other places in the world has made it harder to get truly natural, pure products. If you care what is in your food, cosmetics, and health aids, you need to find manufacturers you can trust.

Efforts to include GMOs in certified organic or all-natural foods and products have so far been unsuccessful. Actually, there are no binding guidelines for 'natural' products. The food industry has spent millions in an attempt to keep from having to put any information about genetic engineering on labels. It's presently up to the consumer to find out if the products they take are free of this kind of tampering with nature.

It's never wise to depend on information that's really cleverly-disguised advertising. This is why the organic certification is important. It's a third-party seal to assure consumers of a product's quality. An all-natural claim is not the same. There is a push going on to include genetically engineered ingredients in 'natural' products; it has not succeeded as yet but probably will not go away any time soon.

Know your manufacturers. All reputable companies will post purity information on websites and display it on their labels. Never rely on advertisements, no matter how impartial or informational they seem. Few supplements are truly natural, anyway. Vitamins do not usually occur in nature in the concentration we have come to expect from our supplements. An orange contains 60 milligrams of Vitamin C; we want 500 to 1,000 milligrams in a single pill.

Even knowing reputable manufacturers does not mean that you can lower your guard. Many companies that set the standard for the industry in the early days of supplements have been sold. The name might be the same, but the standards are now controlled by the new owners (subject to any agreement made when the sale was finalized). When a company is sold, consumers need to make new assessments.

Finding a non-GMO designation on the label is helpful, of course. More and more, manufacturers of truly natural products want customers to know that they are not including ingredients that have been changed into substances never found in nature. After all, the whole idea of alternative healing and health maintenance is that the body will take care of itself if given the right nutrition. If more companies keep their products 'clean' and advertised the fact, and if consumers learn to value truly natural products, the industry will correct itself.

Confusion arises because industry-backed research says including genetically modified ingredients in a supplement does not pose a threat. Other studies, however, do raise concerns, especially for infants and young children still developing and for those already weakened by age, illness, or chronic disease. Those who like their food and supplements as clean and unprocessed as possible are used to erring on the side of caution when it comes to products on the market.

Claims of safety may be premature. GMOs have not been around long enough to really know their effects. To be sure of getting the health benefits you need, choose health aids without genetically engineered ingredients.




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