How to Choose a Supplement


Absorption, Tolerance, Safety, and Clinical Use

Supplements should be chosen based on need, form, dose, safety, and quality, not marketing. A “natural” or “organic” label does not automatically mean better absorbed, safer, or more effective.

For the Pro-Inflammatory Reduction Framework™, supplements are best used to support the body after addressing food quality, gut health, blood sugar balance, stress, sleep, movement, and toxin exposure.


The 6-Step Supplement Selection Checklist

1. Start with the reason

Ask:

  • Is there a known deficiency?
  • Is there a lab value to follow?
  • Is this for prevention, repletion, or symptom support?
  • Could food meet the need first?

2. Choose the most absorbable and tolerated form

Examples:

NutrientPreferred Form
Vitamin DD3, cholecalciferol
Vitamin K2MK-7
B12methylcobalamin or hydroxocobalamin
Calciumcalcium citrate
Vitamin Enatural d-alpha with mixed tocopherols
Vitamin Cbuffered ascorbate or liposomal
Vitamin Abeta-carotene for general support; retinol only when clinically indicated

3. Avoid unnecessary high doses

More is not always better. Fat-soluble vitamins, especially A, D, E, and K, require more caution because they can accumulate in the body.

4. Look for third-party testing

Choose products tested by organizations such as USP or NSF. USP verifies supplement quality, and NSF tests products to confirm contents match the label.

5. Avoid “proprietary blends”

A proprietary blend may hide the exact amount of each ingredient. This makes it harder to evaluate safety, effectiveness, and interactions.

6. Check medication interactions

Important examples:

  • Vitamin K can interfere with warfarin-type blood thinners.
  • Calcium can interfere with thyroid medication and some antibiotics.
  • Vitamin E in high supplemental doses may increase bleeding risk.
  • Vitamin D with calcium may increase risk of high calcium levels if overused

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