December 8, 2016
USOC Dietary Supplement Factsheet
What is a dietary supplement?
A dietary supplement is a pill, capsule, tablet, powder, liquid or other food form intended to supplement a whole food diet by providing any combination of the following: Vitamins Minerals Amino acids Herbs and botanicals (leaves, bark, stems, berries, roots, seed of plants)
Sports supplements are a classification of dietary supplements, often designed to have an “ergogenic benefit” by increasing nutrient intake, lean mass, energy levels, or recovery.What to keep in mind when choosing to take a supplement?
Dietary supplements are not regulated by the Federal Drug Administration (FDA), creating concerns about purity, safety and efficacy. Supplements may contain banned substances even if unlisted on the label or ingredients may adversely interact with medication. Common ingredients in sport supplements (e.g. stimulants, amino acids) increase the risk of contamination with harmful or banned substances. To protect yourself from a positive drug test, leaving yourself ineligible for competition choose food first or select supplements with a Third Party Testing certification (see below). Current dietary intake from food sources must be evaluated to help improve any nutritional deficiencies or inadequacies before supplementation should be considered. Dietary supplements do have a purpose… They may help improve nutrient deficiencies (as identified by a diet assessment and/or blood analysis) to a greater degree than food sources They may help to increase intake of essential nutrients, after improvements in dietary sources have already been made They may offer necessary or efficient nutrient delivery when food sources are limited