• Weil Nutrition Corner
  • Meet Dr. Weil
  • Origins
  • Healthy Aging
  • Marketplace
  • Podcasts
  • Accessibility
  • Subscribe
Dr. Weil Logo Dr. Weil Logo Weil™ Andrew Weil, M.D.
  • Health & Wellness
    Health & Wellness
    Body, Mind & Spirit
    • Addiction
    • Allergy & Asthma
    • Autoimmune Disorders
    • Back Pain
    • Bone & Joint
    • Cancer
    • Colds & Flu
    • Dental & Oral
    • Diabetes
    • Disease & Disorders
    • Ears, Nose, & Throat
    • Feet
    • Gastrointestinal
    • Hair, Skin, & Nails
    • Headache
    • Heart
    • Insects & Parasites
    • Liver & Kidney
    • Mental Health
    • Pregnancy & Fertility
    • Respiratory
    • Sexual Health
    • Sleep Issues
    • Stress & Anxiety
    • Vision
    Balanced Living
    • Exercise & Fitness
    • Gardening
    • Healthy Home
    • Healthy Living
    • Meditation & Inspiration
    • Meet Dr. Weil
    • Pets & Pet Care
    • Technology
    • Wellness Therapies
    Health Centers
    • Aging Gracefully
    • Children
    • Condition Care Guide
    • Men
    • Women
  • Diet & Nutrition
    Diet & Nutrition
    Anti-Inflammatory Diet & Pyramid
    Cooking & Cookware
    Diets & Weight Loss
    Food Safety
    Nutrition
    Recipes
  • Vitamins, Supplements & Herbs
    Vitamins, Supplements & Herbs
    Herbs
    Supplements & Remedies
    Vitamins
  • Ask Dr. Weil
  • Blogs
    Blogs
    Bulletins
    Health Tips
    Spontaneous Happiness
  • Mushrooms
  • Sleep
Press "Enter" to search
Dr. Weil Logo Weil™ Andrew Weil, M.D.
  • Health & Wellness
    Health & Wellness
    Body, Mind & Spirit
    • Addiction
    • Allergy & Asthma
    • Autoimmune Disorders
    • Back Pain
    • Bone & Joint
    • Cancer
    • Colds & Flu
    • Dental & Oral
    • Diabetes
    • Disease & Disorders
    • Ears, Nose, & Throat
    • Feet
    • Gastrointestinal
    • Hair, Skin, & Nails
    • Headache
    • Heart
    • Insects & Parasites
    • Liver & Kidney
    • Mental Health
    • Pregnancy & Fertility
    • Respiratory
    • Sexual Health
    • Sleep Issues
    • Stress & Anxiety
    • Vision
    Balanced Living
    • Exercise & Fitness
    • Gardening
    • Healthy Home
    • Healthy Living
    • Meditation & Inspiration
    • Meet Dr. Weil
    • Pets & Pet Care
    • Technology
    • Wellness Therapies
    Health Centers
    • Aging Gracefully
    • Children
    • Condition Care Guide
    • Men
    • Women
  • Diet & Nutrition
    Diet & Nutrition
    Anti-Inflammatory Diet & Pyramid
    Cooking & Cookware
    Diets & Weight Loss
    Food Safety
    Nutrition
    Recipes
  • Vitamins, Supplements & Herbs
    Vitamins, Supplements & Herbs
    Herbs
    Supplements & Remedies
    Vitamins
  • Ask Dr. Weil
  • Blogs
    Blogs
    Bulletins
    Health Tips
    Spontaneous Happiness
  • Mushrooms
  • Sleep
  • Weil Nutrition Corner
  • Meet Dr. Weil
  • Origins
  • Healthy Aging
  • Marketplace
  • Podcasts
  • Accessibility
  1. Home
  2. Vitamins, Supplements & Herbs
  3. Supplements & Remedies

Can Vitamin Patches Benefit Health?

Andrew Weil, M.D. | July 30, 2021

Can Vitamin Patches Benefit Health? | Andrew Weil, M.D.
2 min

Vitamin patches are trendy, but there’s little evidence to support their use as alternatives to oral vitamin supplements. Sold under names like PatchMD and PatchAid, these products are adhesive patches that you stick on your skin. According to their manufacturers,  the contents of the patch — which can include everything from vitamins and minerals to herbs and other compounds — are then absorbed by your body.

These products are loosely based on the transdermal patches used medically, and the concept that some substances can have systemic effects when applied topically. Transdermal drug products have been routinely in use since 1979, when the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a patch containing the drug scopolamine to treat motion sickness.

Since then, the FDA has approved other transdermal patches, including ones that contain the anti-hypertensive drug clonidine, the painkiller fentanyl, and hormones such as testosterone or estradiol. Transdermal patches containing nicotine are also available as a tool to help people quit smoking.

Rather than medication, vitamin patches contain various compounds meant to improve health and well-being. For instance, you can find patches being marketed with claims of improving sleep, immunity, joint pain, menopausal symptoms, weight loss, and even hangovers.

The benefit of such patches is supposed to be their ease of use — simply applying a patch to your arm has a “quick fix” appeal for some people, especially those who don’t like taking pills. Vitamin patches also promise “long-lasting” results; presumably, you could apply a patch aimed at improving sleep and leave it on all night.

But there are other differences between vitamin patches and transdermal drug patches beyond just their ingredients. First, the research to support the use of vitamin patches is still in its early stages. Some studies are looking at the effectiveness of vitamin patches for people who have undergone bariatric weight loss surgery, a procedure that can make it difficult to absorb nutrients by mouth. However, the results have not been promising. For instance, one small review published in 2019 looked at how people who underwent laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery responded to either a multivitamin patch or pill. The researchers found that 81 percent of patients who used the patches experienced a deficiency in vitamin D, compared with just 36 percent who took oral supplements. Those using patches also had lower blood levels of vitamins B1 and B12, suggesting that some nutrients may not be well absorbed through the skin.

In addition, vitamin patches seem to fall in a gray area when it comes to the FDA; the agency doesn’t appear to consider them dietary supplements or drug delivery systems, and they remain unregulated. Although there’s no evidence that vitamin patches are harmful, I’m not convinced that there’s enough clinical evidence to show that they are helpful either. I’d save your money.

 Andrew Weil, M.D.

Source:
Sarah Baird, “Buying vitamin patches to lose weight? Experts say you’re probably wasting your money,” The Washington Post, September 4, 2018.

www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/wellness/can-vitamin-patches-help-you-gain-focus-lose-weight-or-sleep-experts-are-skeptical/2018/09/03/250cdc7c-aa36-11e8-b1da-ff7faa680710_story.html

Read more tips, recipes, and insights on a wide variety of topics from Dr. Weil here.

Indoor low key image of a serene, stressed young woman feeling headache and thinking by touching her head and looking down with blank expression. She is wearing a sweater. One person, waist up, horizontal composition with selective focus and copy space.
Headache

A Patch To Tame Migraines?

A Patch To Repel Mosquitoes? | Insects & Parasites | Andrew Weil, M.D.
Insects & Parasites

A Patch To Repel Mosquitoes?

Advertisement
Related Weil Products

What’s Up, Twitter?

Join the lively conversation on Twitter. Connect with Dr. Weil and read up on the very latest in integrative medicine, longevity, meditation, microbiome news, and more! Follow on Twitter today! You can also find him on Facebook, Tik Tok, and Instagram. 
The Latest From Andy On Twitter
Dr. Weil on Healthy Aging

Start Your 14-Day Free Trial

Free Newsletters

Stay Connected With Dr. Weil

Anti-Inflammatory Diet

Follow Dr. Weil’s Food Pyramid

Get Dr Weils Newsletter Updates

Exclusive Lifestyle, Nutrition & Health Advice

Dr. Weil's FREE health living advice delivered to you!

By clicking "Subscribe," you agree to the DrWeil.com Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy. You also agree to receive emails from DrWeil.com, and you may opt out of DrWeil.com subscriptions at any time.

Trending Now

bones calcium vitamin d
Supplements & Remedies

A Different Kind of Calcium?

Hands Of Woman Deformed From Rheumatoid Arthritis holding pills
Supplements & Remedies

A Supplement to Prevent Alzheimer's

iodine deficient non dairy milk
Supplements & Remedies

Am I Iodine Deficient?

Glass of light beer on the glass bar counter.
Supplements & Remedies

An Antioxidant In Beer?

Dr. Weil Logo Weil™ Andrew Weil, M.D.
Dr. Weil's Signature

Exclusive Lifestyle, Nutrition & Health Advice

  • About Us
  • Press Information
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Information on this website is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for the advice provided by your physician or other healthcare professional. You should not use the information on this website for diagnosing or treating a health problem or disease, or prescribing any medication or other treatment. Any third party offering or advertising on this website does not constitute an endorsement by Andrew Weil, M.D. or Healthy Lifestyle Brands.

© Copyright 2025 Healthy Lifestyle Brands, LLC. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. www.drweil.com