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Vitamin D at least 30 ng/mL reduced risk for Covid-19 adverse outcomes

journals.plos.org

54 points by InInteraction 5 years ago · 10 comments

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tyingq 5 years ago

How do they net out the idea that people with healthy lifestyles would be less likely to have a vitamin D deficiency? (Better diet, more exposure to sunlight)

  • cameldrv 5 years ago

    There was an actual randomized trial that came out recently [1] where hospitalized patients were given extremely large doses of Vitamin D (explanation of equvalent doses [2]) and it dramatically reduced ICU admission.

    This supports the idea that Vitamin D helping with COVID is probably causal rather than just a correlation.

    [1] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S096007602...

    [2] https://chrismasterjohnphd.com/covid-19/finally-confirmed-vi...

    • yokaze 5 years ago

      One should not leave out the important part "pilot study". As said by the authors in the conclusions themselves, it still requires a larger one to give definite answer.

      • cameldrv 5 years ago

        I agree that a larger N would be preferable, but the effect size was enormous, and so the P value was <.001. Therefore, IMO, it's very likely that Vitamin D has a causal effect. Given that Vitamin D has at least some causal effect, it's much more likely that the observational studies that show a correlation are due to causation.

    • DarknessFalls 5 years ago

      I would be interested to know if supplementation with Vitamin D + Vitamin K2 is more effective in improving survivability.

  • aplummer 5 years ago

    They measure obesity and find it 0.02 vs 0.01 for vitamin d, which seems a decent enough proxy for lifestyle for this kind of study so your underlying point is valid here. Actually i think the biggest missing control is race.

    I went in skeptical even though intuitively being deficient in vitamin d makes sense, this isn’t convincing but I agree with with their conclusion that it’s worth a bigger study.

    If someone reading is wondering whether to maintain a healthy level of vitamin D to help if you get covid, yes you should. Should have done that before this study ofc.

    • thyrsus 5 years ago

      Race can be a proxy for the amount of melatonin, which influences vitamin D. It can also be related to many other things. How would you use race to interpret the data?

techsin101 5 years ago

how much IU is this?

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