World Dairy Diary

New Vitamin D Guidelines Released

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) released new guidelines on vitamin D for infants, children and adolescents at a time when medical conditions attributable to low vitamin D levels such as rickets appear to be on the rise in the U.S.

Rickets first became a problem in the U.S. during the 18th century, in part because smoke from factories shielded people from the sun’s rays — an important source of vitamin D. Rates of the disease, which weakens bones, were brought down through improved nutrition.

“There’s been increased case reports and people describing it over the past five to 10 years; whether this is a true increase is unclear,” said Dr. Steven Abrams, a pediatrician at the Baylor College of Medicine who has been on previous AAP vitamin D guideline committees.

The new pediatric guidelines recommend a daily dose of 400 international units of vitamin D per child per day — doubling the group’s old recommendations.

“The recommendation is going to be essentially a supplement for every child and adolescent in the United States,” said Dr. Frank R. Greer, a pediatrician at the University of Wisconsin and one of the authors of the guidelines.

Greer notes that while children could get an adequate amount of the nutrient from drinking six glasses of milk a day or eating fatty fish such as salmon and mackerel, children are unlikely to do either of those. But he also stresses that parents should not over-supplement their children.

But avoiding rickets may not be the only reason to get those supplements. Another motive for the revised guidelines, according to the AAP, is to build up the body’s defenses.

“New evidence supports a potential role for vitamin D in maintaining innate immunity and preventing diseases such as diabetes and cancer,” write the authors in their abstract.