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Doctors and Nurses
Use /Recommend Supplements
According
to a recent report in the
Nutrition Journal a survey of more than 979 doctors and nurses
reveals they
commonly take vitamin, mineral, and other dietary
supplements themselves, and recommend the same to their
patients, results of a survey indicate.
Dr. Annette Dickinson, from Dickinson Consulting, LLC in St.
Paul, Minnesota and colleagues found that 72 percent of the
doctors and 89 percent of the nurses use some sort of
dietary supplement regularly, occasionally, or seasonally. Moreover,
79 percent of the physicians and 82 percent of
the nurses recommend dietary supplements to their patients.
The online survey was administered in October 2007 by
New York City-based Ipsos Public Affairs for the Council for
Responsible Nutrition, a Washington, D.C.-based trade association
representing the dietary supplement industry.
The physicians, 83 percent male, included about equal numbers of
primary care doctors, obstetricians/gynecologists, and other
specialists, but no pediatricians. About 72 percent of the doctors
were 40 to 59 years old, as were 69 percent of the mostly female (94
percent) nurses surveyed.
Overall, more than half of the doctors and nurses said they
regularly use dietary supplements, most commonly for improved
general health and wellness.
About 24 percent of the doctors and 27 percent of the nurses
reported using only multivitamins. Another 27 and 32 percent,
respectively, took individual vitamin and mineral supplements plus
other supplemental compounds thought to benefit cardiovascular,
joint, or general health, and cognition, such as
green tea,
fish oil,
glucosamine,
flax seed and echinacea.
The findings further suggest a desire for improved education
on the use of dietary supplements, as 75 and 79
percent of the doctors and nurses expressed interest in
continuing education on these products.
Such education "would be beneficial for physicians and nurses as
well as for the patients they treat and serve," Dickinson and
colleagues conclude.
SOURCE: Nutrition Journal, published online July 1, 2009.

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