Multivitamins and HIV


Multivitamins Help Delay Antiretroviral Use Among New HIV Patients in Africa, Study Shows


November 27, 2013
"New research from Africa suggests that basic multivitamin and selenium supplements might greatly lower the risk that untreated people with the AIDS virus will get sicker over a two-year period,"HealthDay News reports (Dotinga, 11/26). "Patients taking a daily combination of vitamins B, C and E along with selenium for two years were able to delay their need for antiretroviral therapies by about half compared with those given a placebo, according to research published in the Journal of theAmerican Medical Association," Bloomberg writes. "The findings are the first to show that vitaminsand selenium can postpone illness in newly diagnosed HIV patients (Ostrow, 11/27). Study author Marianna Baum of Florida International University's Stempel School of Public Health "didn't have information about the costs of the supplements, but she said they are low," HealthDay notes (11/26).

This information was reprinted from kff.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives, and sign up for email delivery. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.

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