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‘Nutrient of the Decade’

Thursday, February 21st, 2008

New York Times Columnist is on the Vitamin D Bandwagon

Jane Brody, the long-time New York Times health columnist whose column is one of the best-read in health-care today, is back on the vitamin D train. Brody’s column on Tuesday suggested that vitamin D research may be among the most important medical findings thusfar in the 21st century.

2008-02-20-nutrient-of-the-decade-tanningnews-copy.jpg“The so-called sunshine vitamin is poised to become the nutrient of the decade, if a host of recent findings are to be believed,” Brody wrote in the Times. “Now a growing legion of medical researchers have raised strong doubts about the adequacy of currently recommended levels of intake, from birth through the sunset years. The researchers maintain, based on a plethora of studies, that vitamin D levels considered adequate to prevent bone malformations like rickets in children are not optimal to counter a host of serious ailments that are now linked to low vitamin D levels.”

The column adds further credibility to the case that natural and intended vitamin D levels are consistent with what one could only possibly receive living outdoors in regular sunlight. Dietary supplements are a substitute at best, and no one is saying for sure how much vitamin D you can take as a supplement.

Vitamin D is very rare in diet. Sunshine is the must abundant and most natural source.

Disappointing in Brody’s column is her reference to how much summer sun is required to manufacture sufficient vitamin D in the skin. “In summer, as little as five minutes of sun a day on unprotected hands and face can replete the body’s supply,” Brody wrote, not taking into account that this recommendation is based on old, lower-level recommendations, that sun intensity varies throughout the day and by location, and that dark skin may need 10 times as much sun to make the same amount of vitamin D as light skin.

Click here to read Brody’s column in The New York Times.

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