Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No gummies though -- they are bad for your teeth
Gummie junk is bad for sure. Bananas are even worse for your teeth. Many people seem to not realize that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, multivitamins are a scam. If bloodwork shows a deficiency, you treat that issue. Otherwise you're just making expensive urine.
Healthy varied diet covers all needs.
My kid is 8 and we have never once done bloodwork. Is this routine?
It was required when my kid started school in DC, to check for lead.
But that's great that you've never had an issue that would require bloodwork! If your kid had a health problem, the doctor would have recommended it, and it might turn up a deficiency that you might treat with a specific vitamin/ mineral. Typical kids do not need a multivitamin, unless their parents let them subsist on a diet of chicken nuggets or something.
Anonymous wrote:For the "expensive urine" people -- if your kid is actually eating a truly varied diet and getting plenty of iron then sure -- they'll just pee out the excess nutrients.
But most kids don't eat truly varied diets. Even the good eaters who aren't that picky. They have veggies they like and veggies they don't -- maybe they love carrots but will just push kale around on their plate. Maybe they are good with dairy but iffy with meat (that's my kid). They'll eat things but they might not eat much of it and they might eat it sporadically.
Vitamins help plug the gap. Because my kid is basically a vegetarian by default and can be hit or miss with other sources of iron, we do vitamins with iron. I'm sure there's a bunch of stuff in there that just goes right through her, but they are cheap and it's not hard.
No gummies though -- they are bad for your teeth and most are not nutritionally as useful as a mass market chewable like Flintstones. They are preying on the paranoia parents now feel about processed foods, but they are also processed. And also terrible for teeth and generally don't have iron and don't offer useful values of other key nutrients.
Flinstones ftw.
Anonymous wrote:Multivitamins are very cheap insurance. "Expensive urine" whiners are spending far more on their "good diets" that they are being a mug about.
Anonymous wrote:
No gummies though -- they are bad for your teeth
Anonymous wrote:Do you have any left ?
Anonymous wrote:No, multivitamins are a scam. If bloodwork shows a deficiency, you treat that issue. Otherwise you're just making expensive urine.
Healthy varied diet covers all needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here’s a Youtube short with a pediatrician listing 5 types of she is recommending parents avoid. Gummy vitamins are #1 on her list (which makes it the last one in the video - about 1 minute in).
https://m.youtube.com/shorts/fnaiLFdxIfo
I don't trust someone who doesn't even know where the vitamins are in a gummy vitamin.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s a Youtube short with a pediatrician listing 5 types of she is recommending parents avoid. Gummy vitamins are #1 on her list (which makes it the last one in the video - about 1 minute in).
https://m.youtube.com/shorts/fnaiLFdxIfo
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes , I give them those gummies as well as a calcium pill. Because they don’t drink milk and don’t like dairy.
Which calcium pill do you give?