Vitamin D and COVID-19: Debating the Research
The paper published in the Irish Medical Journal inspired a lot of commentary by healthcare professionals in all forums. I selected one report from Medscape, an online journal I subscribe to, that summarized all sides of the issue. The writer interviewed a variety of vitamin D experts including the authors of the study in the Irish journal.
The predicted response came from a researcher in Maine: there are no randomized controlled trials, scientific research’s gold standard, that prove that raising vitamin D levels will protect against serious COVID-19 infections. That’s not quite as harsh as it sounds. He recognizes the importance of vitamin D—he’s studied it for 25 years. He’s just stating the facts as he sees them.
The author of the original paper acknowledges that but suggests that because a deficiency in vitamin D can be remedied quickly with vitamin D supplementation, let’s grab the low-hanging fruit and act now with minimal potential for side-effects or negative outcomes. A leading epidemiologist suggests that for some people, vitamin D may reduce the risk of the “cytokine storm” that happens to some people that leads to death from the virus.
What are we supposed to do with such disparity between experts? You haven’t seen anything yet, but we’ll come up with some recommendations on Saturday.
What are you prepared to do today?
Dr. Chet
References:
1. Irish Med J. 2020; 113 (5):81-88.
2. Vitamin D: A Low-Hanging Fruit in COVID-19? – Medscape – May 17, 2020.