Vitamin D testing – letter to editor
The Lancet, Volume 379, Issue 9827, Page 1700, 5 May 2012 doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60712-0
Alan N Peiris a, Beth A Bailey b, William B Grant c wbgrant at infionline.net, Luca Mascitelli d
a Division of Endocrinology, Mountain Home Veterans Administration Medical Center, Medicine Service 111, Mountain Home, TN, USA
b Department of Family Medicine, East Tennessee State University, Johnson City, TN, USA
c Sunlight, Nutrition, and Health Research Center, PO Box 641603, San Francisco, CA 94164, USA
d Comando Brigata Alpina “Julia”, Medical Service, Udine, Italy
Naveed Sattar and colleagues 1 highlight increasing requests for vitamin D measurement and the associated costs. The need to contain health-care costs is universal, especially in western countries where they are increasing at an unsustainable rate. We agree that vitamin D deficiency is prolific worldwide. However, we have major areas of disagreement regarding testing and monitoring of vitamin D.
There are many correlates with serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations, but studies that used common laboratory tests and included latitude and seasonality were unable to predict vitamin D deficiency, suggesting that there is no substitute for 25-hydroxyvitamin D testing.2 We too have noticed a marked increase in testing for vitamin D status in recent years. However, in a study of six Veterans Medical Centers in the southeastern USA, the lowest overall medical costs were in the medical centres that did follow-up vitamin D testing.3 In particular, across all sites, vitamin D deficiency combined with lack of monitoring predicted increased inpatient health-care costs.3
One option to reduce the costs of vitamin D testing would be to supplement the general population with 1000—2000 IU vitamin D3, as recommended by the Endocrine Society.4 Indeed, such an approach has been postulated to result in a substantial reduction in global health-care costs.5 The greatest benefits accrue to those with serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations below 50 nmol/L; optimum concentrations should be at least 75—100 nmol/L.4, 5
WBG receives funding from the UV Foundation (McLean, VA, USA), Bio-Tech Pharmacal (Fayetteville, AR, USA), the Vitamin D Council (San Luis Obispo, CA, USA), and the Vitamin D Society (Canada). The other authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.
References
- 1 Sattar N, Welsh P, Panarelli M, Forouhi NG. Increasing requests for vitamin D measurement: costly, confusing, and without credibility. Lancet 2012; 379: 95-96. Full Text | PDF(43KB) | CrossRef | PubMed
- 2 Garland CF, French CB, Baggerly LL, Heaney RP. Vitamin D supplement doses and serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D in the range associated with cancer prevention. Anticancer Res 2011; 31: 617-622. PubMed Contained in VitaminDWiki
- 3 Bailey BA, Manning T, Peiris AN. Vitamin D testing patterns among six Veterans Medical Centers in the Southeastern United States: links with medical costs. Military Med 2012; 177: 70-76. PubMed VitaminDWiki
- 4 Holick MF, Binkley NC, Bischoff-Ferrari HA, et al. Evaluation, treatment, and prevention of vitamin D deficiency: an Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2011; 96: 1911-1930. CrossRef | PubMed VitaminDWiki
- 5 Grant WB. An estimate of the global reduction in mortality rates through doubling vitamin D levels. Eur J Clin Nutr 2011; 65: 1016-1026. CrossRef | PubMed VitaminDWiki
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This letter-to-the-editor and reply by the authors is in one of the PDFs at the bottom of this page
The other PDF is another letter-to-the-editor concerning the same original article
See also VitaminDWiki
- Veterans and Vitamin D - many studies
- VA found less testing for vitamin D resulted in increased health costs – Jan 2012 many of the same authors
- Mandatory Vitamin D screening for all patients – vitamin D conference in Middle East – March 2017
- Japanese need at least 30 ng of Vitamin D, test costs are now reimbursed – Nov 2016
- Medicare now pays for just one vitamin D test , but 20 CT scans for smokers – Feb 2015
- Low cost vitamin D Blood Tests
- All items in category Test for D
160 items
Many on variation between tests: different days, different testing methods
VitaminDWiki - Cost savings with Vitamin D contains:
158 items include: - Vitamin D has been found to be cost-effective by many studies
- Estimated cost savings of getting most Canadians to 40 ng of Vitamin D - 2016
- Severe asthmatics willing to pay 5180 dollars for relief, Vitamin D needed costs only 45 dollars – Sept 2023
- People with extremely low vitamin D levels consume 2X more health care dollars – 2018
- Reduce 4 health problems by a quarter if increase Vitamin D to 30 ng – Saudi Arabia, Grant March 2023
- The top 10 medical expenses can all be decreased by vitamin D
- VA showed increased vitamin D associated with lower health costs - Lancet May 2012
- Diabetes prevented by 50,000 IU vitamin D monthly (Iran) – Jan 2022
- People with extremely low vitamin D levels consume 2X more health care dollars – 2018
- Giving free vitamin D to every Iranian would pay for itself by just reducing CVD – Oct 2021
- Heart attack ICU costs cut in half by Vitamin D – Oct 2018
- Medical problems are thought to be a cause of 66 percent of bankruptcies – April 2019
- Vitamin D is the 3rd most important contributor to health, following exercise and food
- 10 fewer days of ICU Mechanical Ventilation 300,000 IU injection of vitamin D – RCT March 2019
- Employers gain 10 dollars in productivity for every dollar spent on giving Vitamin D for free
- Employers should give night shift workers free vitamin D – GMB Union June 2019
- Biology of Vitamin D – 30ng min., 50ng preferred, 1000X lower cost than health problem – Feb 2019
- Dutch Vitamin D cost-effectivity Calculations (they prescribe 100,000 IU for Multiple Sclerosis) – Jan 2022
- Vitamin D is needed before most surgeries – many studies and RCTs
- 10 fewer days of ICU Mechanical Ventilation 300,000 IU injection of vitamin D – RCT March 2019
- ICU cost reduced by at least 27,000 dollars if get high dose vitamin D in first week - April 2017
- If you cannot readily get medical treatment, consider Alternative Med such as vitamin D
VitaminDWiki - Veterans and Vitamin D - many studies
VA showed increased vitamin D associated with lower health costs - Lancet May 201210688 visitors, last modified 02 Oct, 2023, This page is in the following categories (# of items in each category)Attached files
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