Now You Can Wear Your Vitamins
Briefly

Now You Can Wear Your Vitamins
"Last Thursday, in lieu of my afternoon coffee, I placed a sticker on the inside of my wrist. It was transparent, about the size of a dime, and printed with a line drawing of a lightning bolt-which, I hoped, represented the power about to be zapped into my radial vein. The patch had, after all, come in a box labeled Energy Boost."
"So-called wellness patches have recently flooded big-box stores, promising to curb anxiety, induce calm, boost libido, or dose children with omega-3s. Their active ingredients are virtually indistinguishable from those of the many oral supplements already hawked by the wellness industry. Whether the skin is a better route for supplements than the stomach isn't entirely clear. But the appeal of wellness patches seems to have less to do with their effects and more to do with how they look."
A transparent, dime-sized patch labeled Energy Boost was worn on the inside of the wrist as an alternative to afternoon coffee. Wellness patches have flooded big-box stores and promise effects like reducing anxiety, inducing calm, boosting libido, or delivering omega-3s to children. Their active ingredients mirror those in oral supplements, and the advantage of transdermal delivery over oral ingestion remains unclear. The primary attraction appears aesthetic and practical: convenience, portability, and avoidance of fillers or digestive side effects. Brands advertise slow-release dosing, pill-free slogans, and removable use, though adhesion and effectiveness vary in practice.
Read at The Atlantic
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]