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Canada and the World

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19 November 2010

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Good Health

Boosted by Vitamin D

 

Canadian toddlers who don’t get enough vitamin D

may be susceptible to health risks later in life

 

The results of the first Canadian study of the effects of vitamin D deficiency have been released by Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children, and they look worrying.

 

Northern Latitudes Lack Vitamin D

Health Canada says that “Vitamin D is synthesized in the skin upon exposure to ultraviolet B (UVB) radiation.” That, of course, comes from the Sun, so Vitamin D is often called the “sunshine vitamin.”

 

However, being a northern country means that the Sun’s UVB is weaker than in tropical regions.

 

The result, according to Health Canada is that “Vitamin D synthesis in the skin is absent during the winter months (October to March), and for an even greater part of the year in far northern latitudes. This means that for a significant portion of the year, Canadians must rely on dietary intake of vitamin D to maintain adequate levels of vitamin D in the body.”

 

Sources of dietary vitamin D include milk, fatty fish, and egg yolks. Also, inexpensive supplements in pill form are available at pharmacies and health food stores.

 

Canadian Kids don’t get Enough Vitamin D

Doctors at Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children say that one third of Canadian youngsters living in urban areas don’t get enough of the sunshine vitamin.

 

In a May 2009 report researchers say their “finding is markedly higher than the data from a previous study of toddlers in Boston that found 14 percent of that population was lacking Vitamin D.”

 

Between November 2007 and June 2008, the study team “evaluated 92 healthy children aged 24 to 30 months who were attending routine well-child visits at a community-based pediatric practice in Toronto.”

 

They monitored dietary intake through questionnaires filled in by parents and established Vitamin D levels through blood tests.

 

“The study revealed that factors associated with lower levels of Vitamin D included lower milk intake, higher Body Mass Index (BMI), and watching television while snacking.”

Doviende

 

Negative Health Effects of too little Vitamin D

The study’s lead author is Dr. Jonathon Maguire, an Academic Fellow in the SickKids Division of Pediatric Medicine.

 

He is quoted by the hospital as saying, “Vitamin D deficiency is associated with a number of chronic medical conditions.”

 

He lists these as including rickets (a disease that may cause severe bone deformities and seizures), Type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis, and certain types of cancers.

 

Other researchers have suggested that vitamin D deficiency may be associated with tuberculosis, high blood pressure, seasonal affective disorder (a form of depression), and memory loss.

 

Writing about the study in The Globe and Mail (May 2009) Martin Mittelstaedt noted that researchers believe babies get enough vitamin D from fortified formula and/or breast milk.

 

He added that the story with toddlers seems to be different: “The finding of widespread insufficiency indicates most children aren’t getting enough vitamin D either through diet or through sunlight exposure. Dr. Maguire said that developing strategies to prevent deficiencies “would seem to be a prudent thing to do.’ ”

 

Sources

Hospital for Sick Children

“Lack of Vitamin D in Kids Linked to Risks later in Life.” Martin Mittelstaedt, Globe and Mail, May 4, 2009.

“Vitamin D Deficiency in 1.1 million Canadians.” CBC News, March 23, 2010.

 

© Canada and the World, October 2010

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Health Canada (Vitamin D)

Statistics Canada has released a study of the vitamin D status of Canadians.

 

Commenting on the study in March 2010, CBC News  wrote that “In the study, 90 percent of Canadians aged six to 79 had concentrations of vitamin D in their blood that were considered adequate for bone health.


“But 10 percent or roughly three million people had concentrations considered inadequate. Of these, 1.1 million were considered vitamin D deficient.”

 

 

 

Health Canada says the recommended daily intake, in International Units, for vitamin D is:

 

0-1 year: 200 IU per day


2 -50 years: 200 IU per day


51-70 years: 400 IU per day


> 70 years: 600 IU per day

 

 

“Worldwide‚ an estimated 1 billion people don’t get enough of ‘the sunshine vitamin.’ ”

 

Vitamin D Society