What you need to know about vitamin D
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The new star of the nutritional world is clearly vitamin D. Most people don’t get enough of this wonder nutrient and increase their risk of several diseases by being deficient. In the last month, several major medical groups have called for a range of policy changes regarding vitamin D, including an increase in the current recommended daily allowance and new testing guidelines to look for deficiencies. Here’s an update:
Studies have linked vitamin D deficiency with an increased risk of hypertension, obesity, diabetes, heart attack, stroke and some types of cancer.
‘Vitamin D deficiency is an unrecognized, emerging cardiovascular risk factor, which should be screened for and treated,’ Kansas City cardiologist James H. O’Keefe, a co-author of the JACC article, said in a news release. ‘Vitamin D is easy to assess, supplementation is simple, safe and inexpensive.’
Optimal levels of vitamin D can be achieved by a combination of sunlight, supplements and foods such as fish, eggs and cod liver oil. Foods such as milk and some cereals are fortified with vitamin D but at levels that aim for 400 IU a day -- which is now thought to be much too low. Vitamin D toxicity (taking too much) is rare but is possible if the intake is greater than 20,000 IU per day.
--Shari Roan