Phases seem to typically be:
- Detect association between nutrient and a health problem
- Determine that the lack of the nutrient is a major cause of the health problem
- Individuals and companies supplement with the nutrient
- Government recommends a minimum daily amount (RDA) of the nutrient
- Government sometimes then fortifies food (milk, salt, bread, . . ) with a bare minimum amount of the nutrient
- Government increases the amount of fortification a half century later due to one or more of the following
Decreased use of the food (e.g. milk, salt) - note: Switzerland is the only country to have recently increased the amount of Iodine in salt
Decrease in other sources of the nutrient (less sunshine ==> less Vitamin D)
Decrease in cofactors needed with the nutrient (Magnesium)
Unfortunately uniform fortification ends using so little as to only partially help about 20% of the population
Often there is a concern that too much fortification will caused problems with some drugs (increase or decrease potency), or rare health problems
Very difficult to have one-size-fits all for anything: fortification, clothing, seats, shoes, eye glass intensity, size of print, calories, hearing aids, etc.
Vitamin D home fortification- don't wait 100 years for your govt
See also VitaminDWiki
- Vitamin D history back to Egyptians and fortification - Aug 2011
- Vitamin D important papers from 1645 to 2013 – Nov 2013
- Vitamin D fortification of food - review Dec 2011
- Vitamin D can fortify a variety of food and drinks – even beer – March 2012
- Vitamin D and Folate fortification of foods - April 2012
- Thoughts on improving vitamin D policies - Vieth Nov 2013 Iodine example
- Saudi have very little vitamin D fortification of food - April 2013
- Milk fortification of 1000 IU got most children above 20ng of vitamin D – March 2013
- Improved health due to vitamin D fortification in Finland
- Can fortify food with 1000 IU of vitamin D - Italy, March 2013
- A plea for vitamin D food fortification in India - May 2010
- A balanced diet is no longer enough – supplements needed - VitaminDWiki Oct 2012
- VITAMIN D: Public Shouldn’t Wait For Doctors To Usher In New “Golden Era” Of Preventive Medicine
- Overview Vitamin K and Vitamin D
- Germany does not fortify ANY food with vitamin D, is considering 1000 IU from bread – Nov 2013
- Incidence of 22 health problems related to vitamin D have doubled in a decade
- Vitamin D home fortification- don't wait 100 years for your govt
- ODIN: Europeans study vitamin D fortification and testing with some suggestions by VitaminDWiki
- Many reasons why vitamin D deficiency has become epidemic has the following graphic
- Overview Magnesium and vitamin D big decline in past 100 years
See also web
- Pellegra and Vitamin B3 (Niacin) Dr. Heaney Nov 2013 - also took a century
- Folic Acid History Wikipedia Dec 2013 - clips
1920s, scientists believed folate deficiency and anemia were the same condition
1930's Folate was identified as the corrective substance in brewer's yeast
1948 clinical efficacy was proven by Sidney Farber
1960, experts first linked folate deficiency to neural tube defects
1990s (late), US scientists implemented the folate fortification program - Vitamin C was the focus of perhaps the first Random Controlled Trial (RCT) in 1758
- Is Food Fortification Necessary? An Historical Perspective 2009
1921 Clinical Trial of Iodine presented at AMA conference, 1924 Iodized salt was common - Micronutrient Deficiency Conditions: Global Health Issues date unknown PDF at the bottom of this page
- Should Foods Be Fortified Even More? Science News Sept 2004
Currently, the federal government requires that manufacturers enrich cereal-grain products with five nutrients—iron and the vitamins thiamine (B1), riboflavin (B2), niacin (B3), and folate (B9). The total cost to U.S. consumers of adding calcium and vitamin D to the list should be no more than about $19 million a year, Harold L. Newmark of Rutgers University and his colleagues report in the August American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Calcium and Vitamin D would add an estimated 6 to 10 cents to the cost of food per person per year—or collectively some $19 million.
The team contrasts that amount with the annual savings of averting some 300,000 fractures ($2 billion) and preventing some 27,000 cases of colon cancer (more than $1 billion). - Food fortification spurred by military purchases 2003
Flour fortification was greatly boosted in the US when the Army required all their bread be fortified during WWII