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A Pediatrics editorial says the strongest evidence about effects of vitamin D deficiency in kids involves rickets, a bone disease common a century ago but that continues to occur.
Rickets can be treated and prevented with 400 units daily of vitamin D, the editorial says. The pediatricians' group recently recommended that amount for all children, saying that most need vitamin supplements.
Mansbach says his study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, supports that recommendation.
Children can get 400 units daily by drinking four cups of fortified milk, or eating lots of fish, but many don't do that.
The body also makes vitamin D when sunlight hits the skin, but many children don't spend enough time outdoors. That's one reason why lower vitamin D levels are found in children living in colder climates and those with darker skin, which absorbs less sunlight.
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Pediatrics: http://www.pediatrics.org/
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