Even Dr. Fauci Takes Vitamin D – New Study Points to Strong Correlation Between Vitamin D Levels and Covid-19 Outcomes
By Steven Hoffman
Dr. Anthony Fauci, M.D., Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, is one of the most trusted experts in the U.S. regarding the Covid-19 pandemic. So, when he recommends taking dietary supplements to boost immunity and lessen susceptibility to Covid-19 infection, people listen.
On a recent Instagram Live interview with host and actor Jennifer Garner, Fauci suggested taking vitamin D and vitamin C, supplements he said he took himself, reported CNBC. (Garner also is co-founder with industry veteran John Foraker of organic baby food company Once Upon a Farm).
“If you’re deficient in vitamin D, that does have an impact on your susceptibility to infection. I would not mind recommending, and I do it myself, taking vitamin D supplements, he told Garner during the livecast. “The other vitamin that people take is vitamin C because it’s a good antioxidant, so if people want to take a gram or so of vitamin C, that would be fine.”
A recent study published in JAMA Network found that people with untreated vitamin D deficiency were nearly twice as likely to test positive for the Covid-19 coronavirus compared to individuals with sufficient vitamin D levels. In addition, in a retrospective study of patients tested for Covid-19, researchers at the University of Chicago Medicine found an association between vitamin D deficiency and the likelihood of becoming infected with the coronavirus.
Past research also has shown that deficient levels of vitamin D are linked to more severe cases of Covid-19 and higher likelihood of death, reported Business Insider. New Hope Network also reported on a number of recent studies conducted in the U.S. and throughout the world demonstrating a correlation between vitamin D levels and Covid-19 outcomes.
In Spain, results of a recent clinical trial with vitamin D study were so startling that, while the sample size was small, the results were so “dramatic that they are statistically significant,” wrote one scientist in BMJ in response to the research.
In the Spanish study, researchers randomly allocated 76 confirmed cases of Covid-19 into those that received either oral calcifediol (25-hydroxyvitamin D) (50 patients) or no-calcifediol control (26 patients) on the day of hospital submission. Oral calcifediol was given at high does on the first day and then on the third and seventh day, and weekly until discharge or admission to the intensive care unit (ICU). All patients also received the best available standard care at the time, the study noted.
Medium reported that results of the clinical study revealed that 13 out of 26 patients, or 50%, in the control group were admitted to the ICU, and two died. In the vitamin D group, only one out of 50, or 2%, required admission to ICU, and none died.
According to Medium, the results of the clinical trial from Spain provide some of the strongest evidence to date that vitamin D therapy could work for Covid-19. The results also support prior research that found that low vitamin D levels in the blood are an independent risk factor for severe Covid-19.
In addition to taking his daily dietary supplements, Dr. Fauci recommends masks, social distancing and handwashing as the best practices for keeping yourself and others safe.
FDA Announces Plans to Tighten Oversight of Dietary Supplements; Issues Warnings to 17 Companies
For Presence Marketing Newsletter, March 2019
By Steven Hoffman
In what Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Scott Gottlieb called “one of the most significant modernizations of dietary supplement regulation and oversight in more than 25 years,” FDA on February 11 announces plans to strengthen its oversight of the dietary supplements market.
“In the 25 years since Congress passed the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA), the law that transformed the FDA’s authority to regulate dietary supplements, the dietary supplement market has grown significantly. What was once a $4 billion industry comprised of about 4,000 unique products, is now an industry worth more than $40 billion, with more than 50,000 – and possibly as many as 80,000 or even more – different products available to consumers,” Gottlieb said in a statement.
According to FDA, the use of dietary supplements, such as vitamins, minerals or herbs, “has become a routine part of the American lifestyle.” Three out of every four American consumers take a dietary supplement on a regular basis. For older Americans, the rate rises to four in five. And one in three children take supplements, either given to them by their parents or, commonly as teenagers, taking them on their own, the agency said.
Commissioner Gottlieb’s statement acknowledged the widespread use of supplements and also that “most players in this industry act responsibly” under the regulatory framework that exists under current law. He also said, however, that “bad actors” have been able to “exploit the halo” created by good companies, and so have been able to distribute and sell potentially dangerous products that put consumers at risk.
“As the popularity of supplements has grown, so have the number of entities marketing potentially dangerous products or making unproven or misleading claims about the health benefits they may deliver,” Gottlieb said.
Under the new policy, FDA is developing a “rapid-response tool” to alert the public to avoid buying products that may contain unlawful or potentially dangerous ingredients. The agency also is looking to update its compliance policies with new dietary ingredient notifications (NDIs), which requires manufacturers to alert the FDA of any ingredients that weren’t sold in the U.S. before 1994.
“An effective NDI notification process represents the FDA’s only opportunity to evaluate the safety of a new ingredient before it becomes available to consumers and helps promote transparency and risk-based allocation of resources,” Gottlieb said.
FDA also is creating the Botanical Safety Consortium, a partnership between the public and private sectors, to evaluate the safety of botanical ingredients and mixtures in supplements.
“As we celebrate in 2019 the 25th anniversary of the passage of DSHEA, AHPA shares Commissioner Gottlieb’s vision…of finding the right balance between preserving consumers’ access to lawful supplements, while also protecting the public from unsafe and unlawful products and holding accountable companies that are not in compliance with the law,” Michael McGuffin, President of the American Herbal Products Association (AHPA), said in a statement. “AHPA has previously communicated specific suggestions for regulatory improvements to FDA and we look forward to a robust and transparent discussion on how best to serve Americans who include supplement products in their families’ health care choices,” he said.
Regarding NDIs, McGuffin added, “AHPA has invested significant resources to assist industry in submitting NDI notifications that meet the statutory requirements to bring a new ingredient to market. We have also submitted thoughtful comments to FDA’s prior draft NDI guidance documents and will continue to provide input so that any eventual guidance is both useful to the trade and does not stray from FDA’s statutory authority.”
Under its tightened regulations, FDA also is hoping to make enforcement processes easier, which allows employees to issue warnings to companies and consumers. The agency on February 11 rolled out part of its plan when it sent warning letters to 17 companies for “illegally selling” products that it said claim to treat Alzheimer’s disease.
“I’ve personally benefited from the use of dietary supplements and, as a physician, recognize the benefits of certain supplements as a part of a comprehensive care plan,” Commissioner Gottlieb said. “It’s clear to me that dietary supplements play an important role in our lives as we strive to stay healthy. It’s also clear that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration plays an important role in helping consumers make use of safe, high-quality dietary supplements while also protecting Americans from the potential dangers of products that don’t meet the agency’s standards for marketing.”