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Date: | Sun, 3 Jun 2007 13:55:09 +0800 |
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On 03/06/2007, at 1:49, cillakat wrote:
> the only people I know holding on to the 'they don't need D
> supplements' theory are those who are still spouting the dermatology
> position that we get enough D from incidental exposure a few times per
> week.
>
> delving into the actual available literature paints a very
> different picture.
That depends how you define "we". I have read the _local_ literature
on "Vitamin D", and people with pale skin and typical daily outdoor
activity levels just aren't getting inadequate D from sunlight in my
town in Australia. Examples of those at risk include people who are
confined indoors (some nursing home patients in very unenlightened
nursing homes, for example), or who cover themselves completely
outdoors for religious or health reasons, or have very dark skin
(usually with other risk factors). Context is all, and this is an
international list.
One reference of note:
<http://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/175_05_030901/nozza/nozza.html>
In this study, 54 of the 55 vitamin D deficient infants had
ethnocultural risk factors. The other had a mother with severe
agoraphobia.
The people I see who are arguing against universal population hormone
treatment aren't saying "no one needs it, ever, under any
circumstances"; they're advocating for risk assessment and
appropriate management - which may include maternal supplementation,
infant supplementation, and/or increased sunlight exposure.
Lara Hopkins
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