Comment Re: Carrying a balance (Score 1) 186
I know it was just an example but it's Canada, the only thing you'll pay for gallbladder surgery is for parking at the hospital.
I know it was just an example but it's Canada, the only thing you'll pay for gallbladder surgery is for parking at the hospital.
“... supplementing the diet of well-nourished adults with (most) mineral or vitamin supplements has no clear benefit...”
This is a great example of how a precise statement by a researcher is misinterpreted or misrepresented when presented to the general public. The above statement is a useful result with a well-defined meaning which is being used in a context that makes it sound like supplements have zero benefit. It's no surprise that that supplements have no clear benefit... when you are a "well-nourished adult'! The danger is that this result can cause people who are not well-nourished to stop taking supplements that may be keeping them outside of harm.
Writers looking to make a story where there isn't one cause much more harm than supplements ever could. (No facts were harmed in the making of that statement.)
Nobody said computers were going to be polite.