Its been known for years that vitamin d deficiency in kids can cause bad bones, rickets, someone has at last used their little grey cells and looked at osteoporosis in older people, guess what a lot of them have low levels of vitamin d in their blood.
Further research is showing that vitamin d has a regulating effect on cell growth, cancer is basically unregulated cell growth, a lot of cancer patients have low vitamin d levels.
There is evidence appearing that vitamin d has a role in the immune system.
Most of the desieses of modern man get more common the further you get from the equator, that includes cancers, heart disease, diabetes, astma, .etc an inverse correlation between incidcence of the disease and strength of sunlight.
The primary source of vitamin d for most people is the action of sunlight on the skin. Vitamin d is produced when UVB radiation of sufficient strength hits the skin, this is the same radiation that causes sunburn, it is blocked by clothing, glass and sun cream.
Some foods such as oily fish contain low levels of vitamin d , but are so low as to be dismissed as a viable useful source, having said that some foods eg milk are available in some countries fortified with extra vitamin d, but as with all such schemes the fortification levels are quite low.
The recommendation in this book is that we all need somewhere in excess off 2000 iu of vitamin d3 per day, this is easily obtainable from sunlight on bare skin if the sunlight is strong enough, in the uk it isnt during the winter months though the body can build up stores during the summer. supplementation is recommended from november to feb.
Regarding sunlight the advise is to get as much exposure as possible to strong sunlight without actually getting pink.
At one point the book quotes an “expert” as saying “for every one woman that dies of skin cancer 50 die of breast cancer which could be reduced by adequate vitamin d levels” its similar figures for prostrate cancer in men.
No surprise there is a website
http://www.vitamindrevolution.com/
happy reading , it looks like getting out in the garden might even be good for you
