Vitamin D to the Rescue!
Oct 28, 2021
NEWS RELEASE
For Immediate Distribution
TORONTO, ON (October 28, 2021) – In these challenging times, vitamin D can be your superhero by strengthening your immune system to help reduce the possibility of severe effects or death from COVID-19.
For our 12th Annual World Vitamin D Day happening on November 2ndour message for you is clear - STOP Vitamin D Deficiency! Make sure you and your loved ones are not vitamin D deficient.
For more information on World Vitamin D Day on November 2nd, visit our websiteand help take action to STOP vitamin D deficiency. Please consider sharing one of our graphics from the Tools section on your social media on November 2nd. Please remember to include the hashtag #WorldVitaminDDay.
It is important to follow your health department’s COVID-19 guidelines. For vitamin D it is also important to follow the recommendations from 48 of the top vitamin D scientists, doctors and researchers who published their D*action recommendations 14 years ago and is provided here through GrassrootsHealth.
The vitamin D scientists recommend that for optimal health everyone, all ages, all ethnicities, should maintain a vitamin D blood level of between 100-150 nmol/L (Canada) or 40-60 ng/ml (USA). Recent research has found that a COVID-19 mortality rate close to zero could theoretically be achieved with 25(OH)D blood levels of 50 ng/mL or 125 nmol/L (Borsche 2021).
Stats Canada reports that 93% of Canadians do not meet this level. The great majority of Canadians are vitamin D deficient and must take preventative action immediately to alleviate this problem or face the health consequences.
The only way you will know for sure that you are within these recommended levels is to have your vitamin D or 25(OH)D tested. You can do this through your healthcare provider or by purchasing a home test kit through GrassrootsHealth.Remember to always get your test score and compare it to the level recommended by vitamin D scientists of between 100-150 nmol/L (Canada) or 40-60 ng/ml (USA).
This is the time of year that Canadians begin to lose their vitamin D that they have accumulated during the warm, sunny, summer months. Research has shown that adults use about 4,000 IU of vitamin D per day (Heaney 2003) for normal bodily function. This is why we recommend that adults need a vitamin D intake of at least 4,000 IU/day from all sources. This is just to replace what your body is using on a daily basis. If you do not do this your vitamin D blood level will continue to fall throughout the winter season making you further susceptible to COVID-19 and a multitude of other serious diseases.
Here is the action that you need to take now to make sure you are not vitamin D deficient:
You cannot become vitamin D toxic if you receive your vitamin D from UVB exposure to your skin.
“Adults should ensure that they receive a vitamin D intake of 4,000 IU/day from all sources (UVB, food, D3 Supplement). This is something everyone can do to protect their health,” says Perry Holman, Executive Director of the Vitamin D Society.
About the Vitamin D Society:
The Vitamin D Society is a Canadian non-profit group organized to increase awareness of the many health conditions strongly linked to vitamin D deficiency; encourage people to be proactive in protecting their health and have their vitamin D levels tested annually; and help fund valuable vitamin D research. The Vitamin D Society recommends people achieve and maintain optimal 25(OH)D blood levels between 100 – 150 nmol/L (Can) or 40-60 ng/ml (USA).
To learn more about vitamin D, please visit www.vitamindsociety.org
For more information, please contact:
Perry Holman, Vitamin D Society, 877-520-4867 pholman@vitamindsociety.org
References:
Lorenz Borsche, Bernd Glauner, Julian von Mendel. COVID-19 Mortality Risk Correlates Inversely with Vitamin D3 Status, and a Mortality Rate Close to Zero Could Theoretically Be Achieved at 50 ng/mL 25(OH)D3: Results of a Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Nutrients 2021, 13(10),3596; https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13103596
Robert P Heaney, K Michael Davies, Tai C Chen, Michael F Holick, M Janet Barger-Lux. Human serum 25-hydroxycholecalciferol response to extended oral dosing with cholecalciferol. Am J Clin Nutr. 2003 Jan;77(1):204-10. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/77.1.204.