“…Furthermore, multiple publications have raised concerns regarding the variability of omega‐3 content in dietary supplements as well as the quality and purity of these products (Kleiner, Cladis, & Santerre, ; Mason & Sherratt, ; Shim, Santerre, Burgess, & Deardorff, ; Truong, Johnson, & Gabriel, ; Tur, Bibiloni, Sureda, & Pons, ; Weitz, Weintraub, Fisher, & Schwartzbard, ; Zargar & Ito, ). For example, studies have shown that the actual concentrations of DHA and/or EPA in omega‐3 supplements may be far below or far in excess of the labeled amounts (Albert et al., ; Kleiner et al., ; Shim et al., ; Yi et al., ). In addition, omega‐3 dietary supplements are not “pure” and may contain contaminants and/or harmful/unwanted ingredients such as high concentrations of cholesterol, saturated fats, lipid peroxides, and oxidation products (Albert et al., ; Jackowski et al., ; Mason & Sherratt, ; Ritter, Budge, & Jovica, ; Truong et al., ; Tur et al., ; Weitz et al., ; Zargar & Ito, ).…”