Living Magazine Fall 2014 Living Magazine | Page 10

Nutrition Corner with Dr. Tory Parker, Ph.D. V I T A M I N How to make a D-lightful summer into a healthy winter! As a University professor, I taught Nutritional Biochemistry for many years. During that time, I learned that certain nutrients—such as vitamin D—can be hard to get enough of, even with a well-rounded, healthy diet. In fact, before joining doTERRA and taking the Lifelong Vitality Pack, I would tell my students that if they only took one supplement, it should be vitamin D. Vitamin D is also known as the “sunshine vitamin” for the fact that your body produces it when your skin is directly exposed to sunlight. Your liver makes cholesterol that circulates to your skin, allowing UV light from the sun to convert the cholesterol into vitamin D. It is especially interesting that you can’t get a toxic dose of vitamin D, no matter how long you are in the sun. If too many UV rays hit the vitamin D in your skin, it gets converted into another compound that your body excretes, leaving you with a perfect amount! Vitamin D is also added to orange juice and breakfast cereals, and can be found naturally occurring in fish and eggs. Between the sun and mentioned food sources, you would think most people get enough vitamin D in their systems; however, this is often not the case. Worldwide, an estimated one billion people have inadequate levels of vitamin D in their blood, and deficiencies can be found in all ethnicities and age groups. Vitamin D was added to milk in the 1930s to help with rickets, a deforming bone disease in children that was particularly prevalent in the northern latitudes. In the winter, people who live at higher latitudes (typically about 40°) can’t make much vitamin D from the sun. sunlight to reach the skin. During the Industrial Revolution, rickets was prevalent in cities where tall buildings and air pollution blocked the sunlight needed for vitamin D production in the body. It was thought that bone-building properties in fortified milk would solve the population’s vitamin D deficiencies, but it was only a partial solution to the problem. Getting vitamin D through natural sunlight is important to the body in many other ways. Additionally, thick winter clothing makes it impossible for the little available Worldwide, an estimated one billion people have inadequate levels of vitamin D in their blood, and deficiencies can be found in all ethnicities and age groups. 10 / FALL 2014 LIVING MAGAZINE