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Many young adults are not getting
enough vitamin D, particularly during the winter months.
Young adults aged 18 to 29
years have an equal to greater risk of vitamin D insufficiency than do
older adults, especially during the winter. This is one of the first studies
in the United States revealing a relatively high prevalence of vitamin
D insufficiency in young adults.
Vitamin D, which helps the
body to absorb calcium, is made by the body when skin is exposed to sunlight.
Vitamin D deficiency puts people at risk for the bone-thinning disease
osteoporosis as well as chronic bone and muscle pains, and may also increase
the risk of certain cancers.
To investigate vitamin D insufficiency,
the researchers screened 165 men and women during March and April, at
the end of winter, and 142 individuals during September and October, at
the end of summer.
Young adults had a 30% increase
in their vitamin D levels from the end of winter to the end of summer.
Nearly
two-thirds of the end-of-summer group and 58% of the end-of-winter group
reported drinking almost two glasses of milk per day, but this was not
associated with higher vitamin D levels.
On the other hand, the 4 out
of 10 study participants who reported taking daily multivitamin supplements
during the summer and winter months had vitamin D levels 30% higher than
those who did not take the supplements.
The
American Journal of Medicine June 2002;112:659-662
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