Oral Answer

Singapore Study on Consumption of Vitamins and Health Supplements

Speakers

Summary

This question concerns the necessity of health supplements for Singaporeans and the regulatory measures taken to ensure their safety and proper consumption. Ms Joan Pereira raised inquiries regarding dietary studies, public education campaigns, and the monitoring of online supplement sales. Senior Minister of State Dr Lam Pin Min replied that a balanced diet suffices for most citizens and that supplements should not replace medical interventions. He reported that the Health Sciences Authority tested over 900 products in five years, resulting in eight removals, and uses a risk-based approach for online surveillance. Furthermore, the Health Promotion Board provides advisories to prevent self-medication and help consumers remain discerning about supplement risks and benefits.

Transcript

13 Ms Joan Pereira asked the Minister for Health with the upward trend in consumption of vitamins and health supplements (a) whether any study had been done to determine if Singaporeans need such products to supplement their diets; (b) whether the Ministry will conduct a campaign to educate the public on the risk and benefit of consuming such products; and (c) over the past five years, how many of such products have been removed from the market arising from routine sample checks.

The Senior Minister of State for Health (Dr Lam Pin Min) (for the Minister for Health): Mr Speaker, most Singaporeans can meet the Recommended Dietary Allowances for key nutrients, such as dietary fibre, iron, calcium, vitamin A and vitamin C, from their usual dietary intake. Certain groups of people may be at risk of deficiencies, such as pregnant women and those with restricted diets or certain medical conditions, and they can benefit from some dietary supplements.

The best way for most of us to get the nutrients we need is to eat a balanced diet of a variety of foods. This includes plenty of fruits and vegetables, sufficient grains as well as dairy and non-dairy sources of protein, and keeping food and drinks high in fat and sugar to the minimum. Health supplements cannot and should not replace a balanced diet. Supplements should not be used to treat or cure diseases in lieu of appropriate medical intervention.

The Health Promotion Board (HPB) consistently advises the public against self-medicating using health supplements and to always consult a health professional before taking any health supplements. In addition, the Health Sciences Authority (HSA) issues consumer advisories to educate and advise consumers to be more savvy and discerning in their purchase and consumption of health supplements. These are published through media releases, media articles and consumer guides on the HSA and HPB's Health Hub websites.

For products sold locally, HSA administers a post-market surveillance programme to sample and test these products for harmful ingredients, contaminants or adulterants. Over the last five years, more than 900 health supplements were tested. Eight products were found to contain western pharmaceutical drugs or toxic heavy metals and were removed from the market.

Mr Speaker: Ms Joan Pereira.

Ms Joan Pereira (Tanjong Pagar): I thank the Senior Minister of State for the reply. I have one supplementary question. Increasingly, we are beginning to see more of such products being sold online. How does the Ministry of Health monitor the online sales of such health supplements?

Dr Lam Pin Min: Mr Speaker, I would like to thank Ms Joan Pereira for the supplementary question. Currently, health supplements and the dealers are not required to be approved for licence by HSA, and health supplements are allowed to be sold on the Internet but must not contain harmful substances or western pharmaceutical drugs or prohibited substances.

While I understand the concern, it is not possible to police online sales of health supplements completely. Therefore, HSA takes a risk-based approach in monitoring the online sales of health supplements through the following modalities.

Firstly, HSA conducts routine surveillance and monitors online sites based on feedback and complaints. Secondly, HSA also works closely with our international counterparts which include information exchange and sharing of alerts to strengthen the detection of unsafe and poor-quality health supplements sold locally. In addition to that, HSA administers a post-market surveillance programme to monitor the safety of marketed health supplements and to initiate timely product recalls when necessary. Last but not least, the post-market surveillance testing is further complemented by our adverse reaction monitoring programme to pick up early safety sickness, thereby, facilitating timely intervention to protect the public.