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View Full Version : Best Multivitamin for Women?



itself
04-03-2010, 07:28 AM
I like taking capsules just wondering what is a cost effective but really good multi vitamin for women.

Thanks in advance!

Lisa

VeloVT
04-03-2010, 10:31 AM
I buy GNC Solotron vitamins (they're available with and without iron). I think they are a nice balance of being higher potency than brands like One-A-Day or Centrum, but not costing an arm and a leg like some of GNC's other multis.

surgtech1956
04-03-2010, 12:39 PM
I like Centrum Silver, will buy the store brand of this.

malkin
04-04-2010, 10:31 AM
I have the kind from Costco.
I needed a strategy to remember to take them. With a Sharpee, I drew eyes and a mouth on the lid and when I floss my teeth before bed, I put a vitamin on the lid as the nose .

In the morning, I notice it smiling at me and then remember to take it.

Eden
04-04-2010, 10:33 AM
My cats would probably get their vitamins if I did that..........

malkin
04-04-2010, 10:34 AM
Our old kitty is much too picky to eat that.

Eden
04-04-2010, 10:36 AM
I've got an odd one.... if it isn't nailed down she'll taste it....

malkin
04-04-2010, 10:48 AM
Kitty's vet prescribed 1 sardine daily (for the Omega 3s), but the old so-and-so won't eat any kind of canned or fresh sardine...so he gets his Omega 3s in a bite of tuna.

badger
04-04-2010, 03:50 PM
I use New Chapter's Every Woman's One Daily, but it's not cheap. I think it's totally worth it, though, as it's considered "food" and can be taken on an empty stomach. Since starting 3 years ago, I hardly ever get sick.

issrit
04-05-2010, 12:43 AM
consuming some dietary supplements is better than not consuming any, but it's better not to consume any supplements if you are consuming poor quality stuff. ;) depending on your age and activity level, any brand reputable brands like GNC, Vitamin Research products, Life extension are ok. some have more ingredients and some less, and how they are manufactured and marketed will affect the cost.

personally i consume xtend life premium for women from new zealand.

malkin
04-05-2010, 11:31 AM
... xtend life premium for women from new zealand.

*giggle*
Do they have a different formula for women who aren't from New Zealand?

itself
04-05-2010, 11:38 AM
My woman chiropractor has turned me on to INNATE vitamins, I am taking their B vitamin now and she is going to get their multi. Despite being in tablet form, they break down easily.

By the way, the test to see if a tablet breaks down is to place it in water and it should start dissolving in a couple of minutes.

I like taking capsules better, though. I do think there is a price to be paid for better vitamins. I will look into New Chapter to see where to get them.

Lisa

shootingstar
04-05-2010, 11:57 AM
Am I the only person here who hasn't gotten around to taking any multivitamin yet?

Recently I realized am now drinking alot more skim milk: about 2 litres per week compared to 1 litre per wk. a yr. ago. It's been just a slow trend for myself. No real conscious thought about what I am doing.

If it works for you, great.

greenapples
04-05-2010, 01:42 PM
I've only tried ones from Whole Foods - I'll look into the GNC ones!

issrit
04-05-2010, 08:03 PM
*giggle*
Do they have a different formula for women who aren't from New Zealand?

try GNC then ;) older women should consume nutrients that will deal with hormonal changes as we age.

ny biker
04-06-2010, 05:34 AM
consuming some dietary supplements is better than not consuming any, but it's better not to consume any supplements if you are consuming poor quality stuff. ;)

Based on what?

I can't swallow big pills so I take Centrum chewable vitamins with breakfast every day.

I started taking them when I realized I was getting very little iron and zinc in my diet. I used to get colds very often and that is no longer the case. Don't know if the vitamins helped with that but I'm sure they didn't hurt.

lph
04-06-2010, 06:39 AM
I've been told that a balanced diet is better than taking broadscale supplements, something about the ratios, and the way the body absorbs them, so that one should only take multivitamins if you know that your diet is poor or lacking in certain things. Based on that I try to eat plenty of vegetables and a varied diet, but I supplement with fish or seal oil (I don't like fatty fish that much, and I have a predisposition to heart disease), and calcium supplements since I eat little dairy products. The calcium supplements also have a little vit. D and K that help the uptake, but I don't think I'm getting too much of those anyway.

shootingstar
04-06-2010, 07:36 AM
I've been told that a balanced diet is better than taking broadscale supplements, something about the ratios, and the way the body absorbs them, so that one should only take multivitamins if you know that your diet is poor or lacking in certain things.

I have been told this by 2 different family physicians. Sure, I've lacked abit of iron at different times in life, so I was on iron supplements for a short time period. Now off the supplements. Better I should pay attention to range of my food intake and their nutrients.

I get a cold once annually or less. I did go through a time where I had a cold once every 2-3 yrs., but I know with age this type of resistance wasn't going to be forever.

I've never taken a vitamin C supplement in my life. I will if the doctor recommends it.
I'm actually eating abit more fish now that I am living on the West Coast and fish is fresher here & better priced.

OakLeaf
04-06-2010, 07:54 AM
When I was in college I got myself totally scr*wed up doing the Adelle Davis thing. Two things it did teach me are that (1) everything needs to be in balance, and (2) there's no pill in the world that contains everything we need to be healthy, not least because we don't completely know everything we need to be healthy.

I do take calcium/magnesium because I sweat so much out that I invariably get cramps if I don't. But... these need to be balanced with zinc, and zinc needs to be balanced with copper, and copper needs to be balanced with iron, and on and on and on. So I just take enough Ca/Mg to prevent the cramps, no more, and try to titrate my own dosage through being aware of my sweat rate.

Then there's vitamin C (the only function of which is to build collagen) - so I will take some when inhalant allergens are high (helps keep mast cells from bursting and releasing histamine), and the morning after a very hard workout (you don't want to suppress the inflammatory response during or immediately after the workout, because that's what stimulates tissue rebuilding, but you want to have enough vitamin C around to be able to build the cell walls later).

And I keep some balanced B-complex around. It's amazing how few B-complex and multivitamins are actually balanced. Solaray has two that are mostly balanced - a chewable (http://www.nutraceutical.com/search/view_product.cfm?product_index=2793625) and a capsule (http://www.nutraceutical.com/search/view_product.cfm?product_index=4112263) - but even those two are relatively deficient in folate and biotin, because of the limits on how much of those can go into an OTC supplement. I prefer the chewable, because of the lower dosage (both in proportion to the folate/biotin, and in general). Every couple-three months I'll take one, and if I'm not peeing out yellow B2, then I know I was deficient, and I'll take one a day until I start peeing it out. Then I won't take any more for several weeks. When my diet is good and I'm not drinking too much alcohol (which the latter is pretty much all the time, now - a good thing for a bad reason), in cooler weather I pretty much don't even need the first one; when I'm sweating out more, it could be two or three days, is all.

JMO....

shootingstar
04-06-2010, 08:15 AM
When my diet is good and I'm not drinking too much alcohol (which the latter is pretty much all the time, now - a good thing for a bad reason), in cooler weather I pretty much don't even need the first one; when I'm sweating out more, it could be two or three days, is all.

JMO....

I will never have the problem of drinking too much alcohol. Past weekend I was lucky enough to savour a gooseberry wine (tastes like a port) just 1/2 wine glass before becoming pink-flushed. :o The natural warning signal, an embarrassing irritant when I was much younger, now I'm most grateful for.

lph
04-06-2010, 09:55 AM
Huh. This weekend I got wasted drinking one glass of red wine. Well it felt that way at least. I drank a small can of beer right after XC skiing (our own after ski in the sun :) ), topped it off with a couple of shots of whisky (excellent Ardmore), and got a little animated, but fine. Late that evening we had dinner, red meat so I agreed to some red wine which I rarely drink. One smallish glass later I'm woozy, flushed and slurring my words. Amazing.

malkin
04-06-2010, 04:33 PM
Lol!
We could have a big TE drunken bash on about one bottle of wine!

issrit
04-13-2010, 12:53 AM
suppose consuming anything in moderation is fine.

Catrin
04-13-2010, 02:05 AM
Lol!
We could have a big TE drunken bash on about one bottle of wine!

1/2 glass of wine is about it for me before it heads straight to my head... so I know how to nurse it along :) Ale, now, I do love a good ale and can generally have two of them - when I have them which isn't very often :rolleyes:

As far as supplements/vitamins, I just don't take them. Do I buy them? Well...yes...but then totally forget about the need to actually put them in my mouth and swallow :p So I gave up on supplements and do what I can to eat properly.

Flybye
04-13-2010, 08:08 AM
Worried about vitamins not breaking down or digesting?
Try chewables. Much cheaper than some overpriced vitamin that claims the same benefits. Says the husband pharmacist.

arielmoon
04-15-2010, 08:09 AM
I have stopped taking pills and started using Whole Food Supplements. Either Vega or True Food Vegan. I also eat a very healthy balanced diet. :)