The Journal of the American Medical Association: is an international peer-reviewed Medical Journal (arguably the most highly influential; or at least among the top three in that area). Here is some information from Wikipedia that appears to be accurate (for those of us who may be unaware, it appears anyone online can edit Wikipedia pages):
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association is an international peer-reviewed general medical journal, published 48 times per year by the American Medical Association. JAMA is the most widely circulated medical journal in the world.[1]
Founded in 1883 by the American Medical Association and published continuously since then, JAMA publishes original research, reviews, commentaries, editorials, essays, medical news, correspondence, and ancillary content (such as abstracts of the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report). In 2005, JAMAs impact factor was 23.5[1] placing it among the leading general medical journals.[2] JAMAs acceptance rate is approximately 8% of the nearly 6000 solicited and unsolicited manuscripts it receives annually.[1] The first editor was Nathan Smith Davis, the founder of the American Medical Association and present editor of JAMA is Catherine DeAngelis, MD
Some information on the AMA (the publisher of JAMA) from Answers.com, provided by US History Encyclopedia:
American Medical Association
American Medical Association (AMA) was founded on 7 May 1847 as a response to the growing demands for reforms in medical education and practice. Dr. Nathan S. Davis (1817–1904), a delegate from the New York State Medical Society who later came to be known as the "founding father of the AMA," convened a national conference of physicians to address reforms in medical education, medical ethics, and public health. On 7 May 1847 more than 250 physicians from more than forty medical societies and twenty-eight medical colleges assembled in the Great Hall of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia and established the American Medical Association. A Committee on Medical Education was appointed, and minimum standards of medical education were established. The first national code of American medical ethics, the cornerstone of professional self-regulation, was adopted. Written by Dr. John Bell (1796–1872) and Dr. Isaac Hays (1796–1879) and published in 1847, the Code of Medical Ethics of the American Medical Association provided guidelines for the behavior of physicians with respect to patients, society, and other medical professionals.
Throughout the nineteenth century the AMA worked to expose fraudulent and unethical practitioners and to limit licensure to allopathic physicians. In 1883 the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) was established with Nathan Davis as the first editor. By 1901, JAMA was reporting a circulation of 22,049 copies per week, the largest of all medical journals in the world.
Membership, however, remained small, including only 10,000 of the 100,000 orthodox physicians. In 1901 the AMA underwent a major reorganization to become a more effective national body by providing proportional representation among state medical societies. The House of Delegates was established as the legislative body of the AMA. Each state society was allowed a specific number of delegates with voting rights. By 1906, membership in the AMA exceeded 50,000 physicians, and educational and licensing reforms began to take hold.
The newly established Council on Medical Education inspected 160 medical schools (1906–1907), and in 1910 the Flexner Report, Medical Education in the United States and Canada, was published. Funded by the Carnegie Foundation and supported by the AMA, the report exposed the poor conditions of many schools and recommended implementing rigorous standards of medical training. By 1923 the AMA had adopted standards for medical specialty training, and in 1927 the association published a list of hospitals approved for residency training.
By World War I, the AMA had become a powerful political lobby. Wary of governmental control, it fought proposals for national health insurance. The 1935 Social Security Act passed without compulsory health insurance due to AMA influence. Physician membership grew steadily to over 100,000 physicians by 1936. The AMA continued to fight government involvement in health care with a campaign against President Truman's initiatives in 1948. In 1961 the American Medical Political Action Committee (AMPAC) was formed to represent physicians' and patients' interests in health care legislation.
The AMA continued to work on numerous public health initiatives, including declaring alcoholism to be an illness (1956), recommending nationwide polio vaccinations (1960), and adopting a report on the hazards of cigarette smoking (1964). AMA membership exceeded 200,000 physicians by 1965. From 1966 to 1973, the AMA coordinated the Volunteer Physicians in Vietnam program and in 1978 supported state legislation mandating use of seat belts for infants and children.
In 1983, membership included 250,000 physicians. As AIDS became an epidemic in the 1980s, the AMA passed a resolution opposing acts of discrimination against AIDS patients (1986) and established the office of HIV/AIDS (1988).
By 1990, health maintenance organizations (HMOs) and other third-party payers were involved extensively in health care delivery. Health care reform had become a political priority. In 1994 and 1995 the AMA drafted two Patient Protection Acts, and in 1998 the AMA supported the Patient's Bill of Rights.
In 2001, AMA membership included 300,000 physicians. As new threats to the nation's health, such as bioterrorism, began to emerge in the twenty-first century, the AMA continued to rely on the principles in the AMA Code of Medical Ethics (revised 2001) and the democratic process of the AMA House of Delegates to guide its actions and policies to fulfill its mission as "physicians dedicated to the health of America."
Bibliography
Baker, Robert B., et al. The American Medical Ethics Revolution: How the AMA's Code of Ethics Has Transformed Physicians' Relationships to Patients, Professionals, and Society. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999.
Duffy, John. From Humors to Medical Science: A History of American Medicine. Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1993.
Starr, Paul. The Social Transformation of American Medicine: The Rise of a Sovereign Profession and the Making of a Vast Industry. New York: Basic Books, 1982.
Stevens, Rosemary. American Medicine and the Public Interest: A History of Specialization. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, 1998.
Here is the abstract:
Vol. 297 No. 8, February 28, 2007
Review
Mortality in Randomized Trials of Antioxidant Supplements for Primary and Secondary Prevention
Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Goran Bjelakovic, MD, DrMedSci; Dimitrinka Nikolova, MA; Lise Lotte Gluud, MD, DrMedSci; Rosa G. Simonetti, MD; Christian Gluud, MD, DrMedSci
JAMA. 2007;297:842-857.
Context Antioxidant supplements are used for prevention of several diseases.
Objective To assess the effect of antioxidant supplements on mortality in randomized primary and secondary prevention trials.
Data Sources and Trial Selection We searched electronic databases and bibliographies published by October 2005. All randomized trials involving adults comparing beta carotene, vitamin A, vitamin C (ascorbic acid), vitamin E, and selenium either singly or combined vs placebo or vs no intervention were included in our analysis. Randomization, blinding, and follow-up were considered markers of bias in the included trials. The effect of antioxidant supplements on all-cause mortality was analyzed with random-effects meta-analyses and reported as relative risk (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Meta-regression was used to assess the effect of covariates across the trials.
Data Extraction We included 68 randomized trials with 232 606 participants (385 publications).
Data Synthesis When all low- and high-bias risk trials of antioxidant supplements were pooled together there was no significant effect on mortality (RR, 1.02; 95% CI, 0.98-1.06). Multivariate meta-regression analyses showed that low-bias risk trials (RR, 1.16; 95% CI, 1.05-1.29) and selenium (RR, 0.998; 95% CI, 0.997-0.9995) were significantly associated with mortality. In 47 low-bias trials with 180 938 participants, the antioxidant supplements significantly increased mortality (RR, 1.05; 95% CI, 1.02-1.08). In low-bias risk trials, after exclusion of selenium trials, beta carotene (RR, 1.07; 95% CI, 1.02-1.11), vitamin A (RR, 1.16; 95% CI, 1.10-1.24), and vitamin E (RR, 1.04; 95% CI, 1.01-1.07), singly or combined, significantly increased mortality. Vitamin C and selenium had no significant effect on mortality.
Conclusions Treatment with beta carotene, vitamin A, and vitamin E may increase mortality. The potential roles of vitamin C and selenium on mortality need further study.
Author Affiliations: The Cochrane Hepato-Biliary Group, Copenhagen Trial Unit, Center for Clinical Intervention Research, Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark (Drs Bjelakovic, L. L. Gluud, Simonetti, and C. Gluud and Ms Nikolova); Department of Internal Medicine, Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of Nis, Nis, Serbia (Dr Bjelakovic); and Divisione di Medicina, Ospedale V. Cervello, Palermo, Italy (Dr Simonetti).
This was (believe it or not, conspiracy theorists) a contraversial publication, and it appears 4 [four] related letters published!
Disclaimer: I need to take a look at those four [4] related replies; my tentative conclusion is so far based on only this one publication, and not the following letters; I haven't had time yet to investigate these yet.
1. Antioxidant Supplements and Mortality
Demetrius Albanes
JAMA. 2007;298:400. (July 25, 2007)
2. Antioxidant Supplements and Mortality
Harri Hemilä
JAMA. 2007;298:401. (July 25, 2007)
3. Antioxidant Supplements and Mortality
Philip R. Taylor and Sanford Dawsey
JAMA. 2007;298:401-402. (July 25, 2007)
4. Antioxidant Supplements and Mortality—Reply
Lise Lotte Gluud, Goran Bjelakovic, Dimitrinka Nikolova, Rosa G. Simonetti, and Christian Gluud
JAMA. 2007;298:402-403. (July 25, 2007)
Not being a licenced physician myself, here are my thoughts:
I must say that after viewing parts of the full text and the investigators selection criteria etc. that this evidence strongly suggests that Vitamin E supplementation has no significant overall effect on mortality. I've read before that there may be overall increases in mortality; and that could, I assume, be due to mega-dosing (i.e. far exceeding 100% US RDA, heavy metals such as lead, cadnium, other heavy metals -- also other impurities may exist, depending on the case).
Since alpha-tocopherol seems to be what is most commonly investigated and is used in the trials cited in the research above, it seems this evidence makes it to be a fair conclusion that alpha-tocopherol alone isn't effective at extending human lifespan.
The Linus Pauling Institute described vitamin E as: "a family of eight antioxidants, four tocopherols, alpha-, beta-, gamma- and delta-, and four tocotrienols (also alpha-, beta-, gamma- and delta-). Alpha-tocopherol is the only form of vitamin E that is actively maintained in the human body and is therefore, the form of vitamin E found in the largest quantities in the blood and tissue (1). Because alpha-tocopherol is the form of vitamin E that appears to have the greatest nutritional significance, it will be the primary topic of the following discussion. It is also the only form that meets the latest Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) for vitamin E."
It seems LPI is saying that alpha is the only vitamer worth investigating. However, I've heard it said before that if the studies included for meta-analysis used different proportions of four tocopherols, alpha-, beta-, gamma- and delta-, and four tocotrienols -- also alpha-, beta-, gamma- and delta-, we'd likely get different results; however, lacking in evidence, it seems no conclusion can be drawn at this point; right?
I don't know what this means, really -- for each individual who considers taking multi-vitamin supplements fortified with vitamin E (and if it's true that (as LPI says): "Alpha-tocopherol is the only form of vitamin E that is actively maintained in the human body," then the other forms are useless, right?).
http://lpi.oregonsta...amins/vitaminE/
It seems it's best to get your vitamins through a healthy diet rather than gamble with pills of unknown efficacy; not to mention impurities.
I guess I can safely say (I am not a doctor though) that individuals who may not get adequate vitamin E in their diet might need a Vitamin E supplement, and prenatal vitamins sound like a good idea. Personally, due to this evidence, I am now concerned that exceeding 100% vitamin e per day may even shorten lifespan for many individuals. Similarly, it seems the same effect may exist in beta carotene and vitamin A, so, in accordance with this new evidence exceeding 100% RDA may seem be risky too. It appears vitamin C and selenium need further study.
Thoughts or comments, anyone?
Take care.