Does Vitamin C Prevent Colds?
Updated May 01, 2014.
Question: Does Vitamin C Prevent Colds?
Vitamin C has long been held as the “cold prevention” vitamin. If we feel a little sick or if the cold season is coming on, we might start taking a vitamin C supplement for keep from getting sick. But does this really work? Where is the evidence about vitamin C and preventing colds?
Answer: The theory that vitamin C can help prevent colds comes from the idea that vitamin C gives the immune system “a boost.” But does that boost really matter?
Researchers looked at studies of vitamin C where people took at least 200 milligrams of vitamin C daily in the form of a supplement and people were randomly placed in a placebo or vitamin C group. They then pooled the studies using a technique known as “meta-analysis.” Here’s what they found:
In 29 studies involving 11,077 people, the risk of developing cold symptoms during the study period was the same regardless of whether people were taking a daily supplement of vitamin C or a placebo. This was true for almost every group of people studied. There were a few exceptions:
Bottom line, vitamin C seems like a “bust” for preventing and managing colds.
Source: Douglas RM, Hemilä H (2005) Vitamin C for Preventing and Treating the Common Cold. PLoS Med 2(6): e168
Question: Does Vitamin C Prevent Colds?
Vitamin C has long been held as the “cold prevention” vitamin. If we feel a little sick or if the cold season is coming on, we might start taking a vitamin C supplement for keep from getting sick. But does this really work? Where is the evidence about vitamin C and preventing colds?
Answer: The theory that vitamin C can help prevent colds comes from the idea that vitamin C gives the immune system “a boost.” But does that boost really matter?
Researchers looked at studies of vitamin C where people took at least 200 milligrams of vitamin C daily in the form of a supplement and people were randomly placed in a placebo or vitamin C group. They then pooled the studies using a technique known as “meta-analysis.” Here’s what they found:
In 29 studies involving 11,077 people, the risk of developing cold symptoms during the study period was the same regardless of whether people were taking a daily supplement of vitamin C or a placebo. This was true for almost every group of people studied. There were a few exceptions:
- People undergoing extreme physical exercise (marathon runners) or people exposed to extreme cold (skiers and soldiers in arctic weather) were half as likely to come down with cold symptoms if they were taking a vitamin C supplement.
- Children taking a vitamin C supplement had shorter colds by 13% and adults taking a vitamin C supplement had shorter colds by 8%.
Bottom line, vitamin C seems like a “bust” for preventing and managing colds.
Source: Douglas RM, Hemilä H (2005) Vitamin C for Preventing and Treating the Common Cold. PLoS Med 2(6): e168