Some Vitamin B Supplements Lack Significant Amounts of Vitamin.
Recently Consumer Labs (a consumer protection organization that tests supplements) released a report that identified as many of 50% of the supplements tested did not contain the amounts of B vitamins that were listed on their labels.
Each B vitamin is associated with a variety of functions. Several (B-6, B-12, and folate) have shown promise for reducing the risk of heart disease, leading to the current popularity of B complex supplements. Folate is also important in reducing birth defects of the spinal cord and is, therefore, a critical ingredient in prenatal vitamins. Niacin, when taken in very high doses, can improve cholesterol levels. Like most vitamins, B vitamins are essential — your body cannot make them; you must get them from your diet or from supplements. Vitamin B has also been shown to improve energy which has led to including this vitamin in the increasingly more popular energy drinks. If you are someone who has insufficient absorption in your digestive tract, you are less likely to be able to receive the required doses of vitamin B from your foods.
Due to the research showing the benefits of vitamin B supplements, these supplements have become the most popular supplements purchased by American consumers.
The following vitamin B supplements were not approved by Consumer Labs:Kirkland Signature™ B-50 Formula with 100% Folic Acid (1 tablet per day),Life Time® Balanced B-100 Vitamin B Complex Capsules Food Allergen Free (1 capsule per day),Thorne Research Basic B Complex (1 capsule per day),Thompson® Folic Acid 800 mcg (1 tablet per day).
Baby Cribs Recalled After Three Deaths
Following article is from the Associated Press.
WASHINGTON (AP) — About 1 million Simplicity and Graco cribs are being recalled after three children became entrapped in their cribs and died of suffocation, the Consumer Product Safety Commission said Friday.
Two infants, a 6-month-old and a 9-month-old, died in the recalled cribs, which were sold through May 2007. A 1-year-old child died in a newer model of the cribs, which has not been recalled but is being investigated by the safety agency, CPSC officials said.
Commission spokesman Ed Kang would not comment on when or where the children died. Simplicity spokesman Joe Householder said the company will not release further details about the deaths out of respect for the families.
In all three deaths, the consumer had installed the drop-rail side of the crib upside down, the CPSC said. This creates a gap in the crib that children can slide into and suffocate.
Seven other infants have been entrapped in the cribs, according to the CPSC. There have been 55 reports of the cribs’ drop sides detaching or the hardware failing to hold the side to the crib.
Simplicity Inc., of Reading, Pa., is listed as manufacturer of all the cribs, which were made in China. The recalled cribs were sold nationwide, under the Simplicity or Graco brands, from January 1998 through May 2007. The recall involves multiple models and model numbers.
“Simplicity strives to make safe products, that is our number one priority. That’s why we worked with the CPSC to take this action,” Simplicity president Ken Waldman said in a statement.
In a separate recall in June, the commission recalled about 40,000 Nursery-in-a-Box cribs, manufactured by Simplicity, because the assembly instructions incorrectly explain how to attach the drop side.
None of the cribs that Simplicity currently supplies to stores is included in a recall, the company said in a statement.
The commission, however, cautioned consumers who have the newer versions not covered by the recall to check to make sure the drop side is installed right side up and securely attached. The newer hardware has a flexible tab at the top of the lower track and a permanent stop at the bottom. The older hardware has a flexible tab at the bottom of the lower tracks.
In an earlier Simplicity recall, a 19-month-old child in Myrtle Creek, Ore., died Jan. 6, 2006, in a crib that carried the Graco logo, the CPSC said in February 2006. Mattress support slats came out of the crib, and the child suffocated after getting trapped between the mattress and the footboard. That type of crib had been included in a December 2005 recall of about 104,000 Aspen 3 in 1 Cribs.
The company is offering free repairs for cribs with older hardware. For more information, consumers can contact Simplicity at 888-593-9274.