Women’s Health Month: Nutrific SuperFood Multivitamin addresses women’s health gaps
On Women’s Health Month, nutrition expert Dr. Amy Lee highlights the Nucific SuperFood Multivitamin — a daily women’s health supplement comprising essential vitamins, minerals, and superfoods.
The brand highlights unique demands women face — from balancing hormones to maintaining heart, brain, and bone health.
This formula blending organic fruits, vegetables, and powerful antioxidants is designed to fill nutritional gaps, help boost natural energy and support healthy digestion.
By harnessing the natural benefits of organic greens, berries, and botanicals, this supplement provides users with the micronutrients their bodies need to thrive. Additionally, its formulation includes scientifically backed compounds such as CoQ10 for cellular energy, lutein for eye health, and turmeric for its health-supporting properties.
Broad-spectrum ingredients
The Nucific SuperFood Multivitamin contains an organic phyto mix of organic beet root, black currant leaves, blueberry fruit, broccoli stems and florets, cranberry concentrate, kale, pomegranate, raspberry, and spinach.
For cognitive health, it includes ginkgo biloba leaf, organic ginger root, inositol, boron citrate, and organic chaga mycelium to support brain function.
For the heart, it features organic cinnamon bark, organic turmeric root, organic grape extract, organic resveratrol, and CoQ10 to support cardiovascular health.
To aid vision, the formula comprises lycopene, lutein, and zeaxanthin to aid eye health.

The supplement also offers vitamins A, C, D3, E, B-complex, calcium, iodine, magnesium, zinc, selenium, and more to help ensure comprehensive nutritional support.
Dr. Lee is a member of the US National Board of Physician Nutrition Specialists and board-certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine.
Serving as the chief medical officer in more than 30 nutrition clinics in Southern California, Dr. Lee focuses on creating medical talks for HBO, Hulu, PBS, and UCLA’s famed Vital Signs. She is also the co-author of the recent book, “Access: Addressing the Obesity Crisis.”