Dietary supplements – The importance of potency and purity
Betty Chaffee/ October 23, 2025/ Dietary Supplements, Medication Management, Self management/ 1 comments
What's REALLY in the supplement product you just purchased?
At first thought, it might seem a given that a product actually contains the ingredients listed on the label, in the listed amounts. But it turns out that for dietary supplements, that's not always the case.
The production and sale of dietary supplements is a booming industry. Nearly 3/4 of US adults use at least one supplement on a daily basis. At last check, dietary supplements were a $60 billion per year industry! All you have to do is walk into a pharmacy and look at the supplement shelves to see that many manufacturers have gotten into the game. Why? Because though supplements are often marketed to prevent or treat health conditions, they aren't strictly regulated by the FDA. Instead of the strict regulations that apply to medications, supplements are regulated as if they were food. Looser regulations result in lower costs to bring a product to market. So it's relatively inexpensive to produce and sell a dietary supplement. And once it's on the shelves, we consumers will buy them. It's easy to see why many companies are eager to break into the industry.
FDA requires manufacturers to follow good manufacturing practices, and randomly inspects manufacturing facilities to make sure it's happening. But the products themselves aren't routinely tested by the FDA in the same way they test approved medications. Many supplement manufacturers are reputable companies who market reliable products, But it's not unusual to find supplements from other companies that don't contain the ingredients listed on the label. FDA recalls these products when they're made aware, but they continue to happen. So how can you have confidence that the product you'd like to purchase IS what the label says it is?
Dietary Supplement Seals of Approval

NSF International, US Pharmacopeia, and Consumer Lab Seals of Approval

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