Completely disagree with what you said.
With what exactly?
I'm sure Dr Paley who has been doing this for 20+ years would have looked into this and would have recommended it if it was proven to help.
It doesn't work that way. No matter how good the doctor, you still need to take matter into your own hands.
For example, I wrote in another thread that nobody from the Paley team recommended to me any specific supplements until I asked explicitly about diet. Only then did Dr. Robbins (not Dr. Paley, and I had emailed them both) recommend Bone Health Now. Same thing about the
increased caloric intake.
I wouldn't take any supplements that the doctor doesn't recommend because I am not the expert, I'm paying for the best doctor in the world so I would follow his advice and only his advice to the letter.
You might want to check Unicorn888's diary to see what happens when you blindly trust your doctor to the letter.
Anyway, you don't have to wait for the doctor to recommend a supplement. Doctors are humans and they forget. Or they might not deem a supplement useful for the typical patient, but if it worked for you in the past, they maybe happy to say go for it.
Ask the doctor; don't wait for them to recommend. I asked about collagen, CBD and kratom, and the PAs were fine with me taking them. Would they have recommended them unprompted, on their own? Most likely not.
How do you know the stuff you are taking isn't detrimental to your health somehow?
Because there are studies out there. Take cannabis, for example. THC is a powerful analgesic that can
cut pain from level 7 to level 4. Very few studies have shown that it does interact with bone formation, but if you look into the details, you'll see that the quantity that did affect the rats was so large that half the rats died during the experiment. However, doctors will tell you to stay away from THC out of extreme caution. Whether you want to heed that advice and endure the pain, is your choice.