#393 ‒ AMA #85: A guide to medications and supplements: determining what to take, what to skip, and how to know if they're working for you

第393期 - 美国医学协会第85期:药物和补充剂的指南:确定该服用什么、该跳过什么,以及如何知道它们是否对您有效

The Peter Attia Drive

2026-05-25

13 分钟
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单集简介 ...

View the Show Notes Page for This Episode Become a Member to Receive Exclusive Content Sign Up to Receive Peter's Weekly Newsletter In this "Ask Me Anything" (AMA) episode, Peter explores how to think critically about medications and supplements by focusing not on whether an intervention is inherently "good" or "bad," but on whether it makes sense for a specific person with a specific problem. He explains why clearly defining the problem matters more than choosing the intervention itself, how the intended purpose of a medication or supplement should influence the standard of evidence required, and why mechanistic reasoning alone is rarely enough to justify taking something. Peter also examines how baseline risk shapes the true benefit of an intervention, why relative risk statistics can be misleading without proper context, and how to weigh not only side effects, but also cost, inconvenience, and opportunity cost when deciding whether something is worth taking. Additionally, he discusses practical ways to evaluate whether a supplement is actually having a meaningful effect, how to think about discontinuing therapies, why supplements deserve far more skepticism than they often receive, and the small group of over-the-counter supplements he believes may offer a reasonable risk-reward trade-off. If you're not a subscriber and are listening on a podcast player, you'll only be able to hear a preview of the AMA. If you're a subscriber, you can now listen to this full episode on your private RSS feed or our website at the AMA #85 show notes page. If you are not a subscriber, you can learn more about the subscriber benefits here. We discuss: How to properly define health problems before considering medications or supplements [1:45]; How the intended purpose of an intervention should determine evidence standards and risk tolerance [5:00]; Understanding the hierarchy of evidence for medications and supplements and avoiding the mistake of treating weak evidence as clinical proof [9:00]; Why mechanistic explanations can be misleading when evaluating longevity interventions [13:15]; How baseline risk—and the distinction between relative and absolute risk reduction—changes the real-world benefit of medications and supplements [18:15]; Thinking beyond side effects: the many forms of downside associated with medications and supplements [22:45]; Why medications and supplements require different standards of trust and evidence [26:00]; How to structure meaningful self-experiments with medications and supplements to determine if it's they're working [30:30]; How to monitor the effects of medications and supplements without fooling yourself [32:30]; How to periodically reevaluate and potentially discontinue medications and supplements [35:15]; The biggest risks and failure modes of over-the-counter supplements: efficacy, poor quality control, contamination, interactions, toxicity, and marketing-driven overuse [38:30]; Why the US supplement regulatory system creates unreliable products [41:45]; A practical framework for evaluating medications and supplements [46:30]; Over-the-counter supplements with the best balance of evidence and low downside risk [48:00]; and More. Connect With Peter on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube
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单集文稿 ...

  • Hey everyone, welcome to a sneak peek, Ask Me Anything or AMA episode of The Drive podcast.

  • I'm your host, Peter Attia.

  • At the end of this short episode, I'll explain how you can access the AMA episodes in full,

  • along with a ton of other membership benefits we've created,

  • or you can learn more now by going to peterattiamd.com forward slash subscribe.

  • So without further delay, here's today's sneak peek of the Ask Me Anything episode.

  • Welcome to Ask Me Anything, AMA episode 85. Today we're talking about medications and supplements.

  • This is one of the topics I get asked about more than almost anything else,

  • and I think it's also one of the easiest areas to go wrong.

  • People tend to ask me whether something is good or bad, whether they should take it or not,

  • but those are, I think, kind of the wrong questions.

  • The right question is whether a specific intervention makes sense for a specific person with a specific problem,

  • and that's what I'm going to try to get to today.

  • So in this episode, we'll cover why defining the problem matters more than picking the intervention,

  • the different jobs a medication or supplement can do, and why the evidence bar should move depending on the job,

  • how to tell strong evidence from weak evidence, and why mechanism alone isn't enough.

  • Why baseline risk changes everything, and how relative risk can mislead you.

  • How to think about the real downside of taking something: side effects, yes,

  • but also cost, hassle, and opportunity cost.

  • How to determine whether the supplement you're taking is having any real effect.