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Review of 12 intervention trials concludes showing vitamin C works for Covid. Why aren’t we being told to take it?

Bymac

Nov 20, 2021 #Coronavirus, #Experts

A review of 12 vitamin C studies, including five randomised controlled trials, is published in the journal Life today (Monday 1st Nov) showing that this simple, cheap vitamin can, and is, saving lives when given in the right dose.

Everyone knows that vitamin C is important for immunity – sales of both oranges and vitamin C tablets have risen sharply during the Covid pandemic.

But can vitamin C actually treat or prevent Covid infection from becoming serious? A review of twelve studies, including five ‘gold standard’ randomised controlled trials, shows that this simple vitamin can, and is, saving lives when given in the right dose.

The scientific evidence is clear; vitamin C can potentially help prevent Covid and, if taken once infected, can also reduce symptoms and duration of illness. So why aren’t we being told to supplement with vitamin C?

The review of the 12 studies, including the five randomised controlled trials, is published in the journal Life, [www.vitaminC4covid.com/12trialreview], and was carried out and funded by VitaminC4Covid.

VitaminC4Covid is a team of vitamin C experts including Dr Marcela Vizcaychipi from the Faculty of Medicine at London’s Imperial College, and Associate Professor Anitra Carr who heads the Nutrition in Medicine group at the University of Otago where they have been monitoring all Covid-related studies on vitamin C.

The studies show that Covid patients have depleted vitamin C levels, often to the level found in scurvy, and need substantial doses to recover and survive.

Dr Vizcaychipi, who heads research in intensive care medicine at the Chelsea & Westminster Hospital has been giving Covid and non-Covid patients in their Intensive Care Units up to 6 grams of vitamin C intravenously. The dosage is dependent on the severity of disease and the amount needed to correct deficiency, as indicated by vitamin C urine sticks (when available).

“Vitamin C is certainly one of multiple factors that contributes to better outcomes and speed of recovery. It should be standard practice. We have not had any safety issues at all.” says Dr Vizcaychipi, who heads research in intensive care medicine at the Chelsea & Westminster Hospital.

What the review of 12 clinical trials shows is that ‘intravenous vitamin C may improve oxygenation parameters, reduce inflammatory markers, decrease days in hospital and reduce mortality, particularly in the more severely ill patients.’

What is remarkable about vitamin C is that it is both an antioxidant (meaning it protects oxygen supply), an anti-viral, and is also anti-inflammatory – so an impressive three-in-one defender. Not one adverse event has been reported in any published vitamin C clinical trials in COVID-19 patients.

Also, the review shows that high doses of vitamin C tablets upon infection may also keep people out of hospital through increasing their rate of recovery.

According to Carr “Oral doses of 8 grams per day have been shown to increase the rate of recovery from symptomatic infection by 70%. For more critically ill patients trials using doses of 6-24g a day intravenously have shown positive benefits in terms of increased survival, and reduced hospital stay, improved oxygenation or reduced inflammation.”

Twenty oranges provide one gram of vitamin C, so these kinds of levels require supplementation. The review includes several studies showing that ‘patients with severe respiratory infections have depleted vitamin C status, with the prevalence of deficiency increasing with the severity of the condition’.

In one study vitamin C levels predicted who would or wouldn’t survive. Plasma concentrations of vitamin C were reported to be very low in 70-80% of Covid patients. What is clear is that several grams, not just a glass of orange juice, are needed to correct vitamin C deficiency. Dr Vizcaychipi has used inexpensive vitamin C urine sticks to check if enough is being given to reload vital vitamin C stores.

The VitaminC4covid team, founded by nutrition expert Patrick Holford, have been calling on government advisors to carry out a proper review of the evidence for vitamin C, in order to inform the public and medical profession, for over a year.

NICE (the National Institute for Clinical Evidence) set up the RAPID C-19 oversight group exactly for the purpose of finding potential treatments as fast as possible. Yet, a NICE spokesperson confirmed that ‘neither NICE nor RAPID C-19 have undertaken a review of vitamin C for COVID-19’ since September 2020, when these trials were initiated and noted by RAPID C-19.

To make matters worse a Freedom of Information request revealed that RAPID C-19 told Public Health England, which oversees the nation’s health education for disease prevention, specifically not to review vitamin C [or D] to avoid ‘duplication of effort’.

So, to date, no government agency has reviewed the evidence from a growing number of well-designed clinical trials. Despite this MPs were recently told by Jo Churchill, the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Primary Care and Health Promotion that ‘we do not believe that there is sufficient evidence at this stage to conclude that vitamin C is a safe and effective treatment for COVID-19’.

How does she form such a belief when no review has been carried out? A UK trial set up in June 2020, called REMAP-CAP, has not even started due, they say, to ‘lack of vitamin C’. There is no shortage.

“There seems to be a double standard” says Holford. “The promise of evidence-based medicine to those advocating non-drug treatments such as vitamins was effectively – come up with the evidence and we’ll treat it like any other medicine. The evidence is now undeniable so why aren’t people being told to take high dose vitamin C upon infection and all hospitals checking vitamin C status with urine sticks as a routine measure and acting accordingly? Vitamin C is safe, inexpensive, available and now proven to work.”

See www.vitaminC4covid.com/recommendations for guidance on what to take for prevention and if you become infected.

By mac