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Vitamin D, the Sunshine Supplement, Has Shadowy Money Behind It (nytimes.com)

The New York Times tells the story of Dr. Michael Holick, a Boston University endocrinologist "who perhaps more than anyone else is responsible for creating a billion-dollar vitamin D sales and testing juggernaut." From the report: Dr. Holick's role in drafting national vitamin D guidelines, and the embrace of his message by mainstream doctors and wellness gurus alike, have helped push supplement sales to $936 million in 2017. That's a ninefold increase over the previous decade. Lab tests for vitamin D deficiency have spiked, too: Doctors ordered more than 10 million for Medicare patients in 2016, up 547 percent since 2007, at a cost of $365 million. But few of the Americans swept up in the vitamin D craze are likely aware that the industry has sent a lot of money Dr. Holick's way. A Kaiser Health News investigation for The New York Times found that he has used his prominent position in the medical community to promote practices that financially benefit corporations that have given him hundreds of thousands of dollars -- including drug makers, the indoor tanning industry and one of the country's largest commercial labs.

In an interview, Dr. Holick acknowledged he has worked as a consultant to Quest Diagnostics, which performs vitamin D tests, since 1979. Dr. Holick, 72, said that industry funding "doesn't influence me in terms of talking about the health benefits of vitamin D." There is no question that the hormone is important. Without enough of it, bones can become thin, brittle and misshapen, causing a condition called rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults. The issue is how much vitamin D is healthy, and what level constitutes deficiency.

4 of 151 comments (clear)

  1. Appearance of impropriety by larryjoe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "Dr. Holick, 72, said that industry funding "doesn't influence me in terms of talking about the health benefits of vitamin D."

    It is arguable that this doctor wasn't directly influenced by lobbying money. However, there is a definite appearance of impropriety. The doctor's statement above is not believable. What he should have said is, "I accepted money that influences me to promote ideas that I already believed in."

    1. Re: Appearance of impropriety by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And this article did spur science. In November, the results of a double blind study will be published with 23000 participants. That will help clarify the matter, and if it turns out that VitaminD is a problem, we'll all be better off.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  2. Re:Only in America by ooloorie · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Can a billion dollar industry form around a vitamin the human body produces itself in ample supply.

    For many people it doesn't.

    As the NYT article states, "Drug companies can sell fear, but they can't sell sunlight, so there's no promotion of the sun's health benefits."

    Compensating for low vitamin D levels with sun exposure is asking for skin cancer.

  3. Re:Only in America by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It concluded that the vast majority of Americans get plenty of the hormone naturally, and advised doctors to test only patients at high risk of certain disorders, such as osteoporosis.

    A few months later, in June 2011, Dr. Holick oversaw the publication of a report that took a starkly different view.

    There is definitely some sort of big D conspiracy going on.

    I'm not a doctor, and I don't even play one on TV; but I can state I'm skeptical of the whole Vit D. Every year my doctor tells me to up my D intake. First it was, take a multivitamin; then it was... that's not enough, that only has 100% of daily need- you should be getting 500% of what is recommended the recommended level is too low.

    Every year he tells me I should be taking more and more... ... I've stopped listening to him about the issue, even though every year he tells my Vit D levels in my blood are too low- they're merely average. I think he's become brain washed by some strange D cult. He's all about the D.

    --
    "That's the way to do it" - Punch