VitC-Zinc-C19

Vitamin C, Zinc, and COVID-19

Last week, a study was published in JAMA Online that did a randomized controlled trial using vitamin C and zinc to treat people diagnosed with COVID-19. Several longtime readers asked me to review videos posted by physicians and other healthcare professionals who’ve used vitamin C and zinc to treat COVID-19 infections. I did and I’ll comment on Saturday, but let’s look at the science.

Researchers from a well-respected healthcare organization, the Cleveland Clinic, requested volunteers from multiple locations in Ohio and Florida for a study. The purpose was to see if vitamin C (8000 mg), or zinc (50 mg), or vitamin C plus zinc would reduce symptoms associated with diagnosed COVID-19 when compared to a group taking no dietary supplements. The objective was to see if symptoms in the groups taking the supplements could be reduced by 50% within five days or less when compared with controls. They used symptom scales such as fever, cough, and shortness of breath, among others.

The researchers stopped the study early due to futility: there were no differences in any of the experimental groups compared to the controls after reaching 40% of the subjects they intended to recruit. Frontline physicians say supplements work against COVID; this research trial says they don’t. Who’s correct? I think they’re both wrong, and I’ll tell you why on Saturday.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Reference: JAMA Network Open. 2021; doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.0369