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Vitamin D Fails To Benefit Blacks

AR Articles on Racial Differences
Race and Psychopathic Personality (Jul. 2002)
Race and Teenage Pregnancy (Feb. 2002)
The Biological Reality of Race (Oct. 1999)
Why Race Matters (Oct. 1997)
Race and Health (May 1996)
A New Theory of Racial Differences (Dec. 1994)
Search AmRen.com for Racial Differences
More news stories on Racial Differences
Joyce Howard Price, Washington Times, July 26

Vitamin D supplementation does not appear to have the same bone-strengthening benefits in post-menopausal black women as it does in older white women, according to a study in yesterday’s issue of Archives of Internal Medicine.

“To our knowledge, this study is the first clinical trial examining the effect of vitamin D on bone loss in African-American women,” bone specialists at Winthrop University Hospital in Mineola, N.Y., wrote.

“Our study demonstrated a lack of benefit of vitamin D supplementation in loss of skeletal mass in calcium-sufficient African-American women in midlife.”

Dr. John F. Aloia, chief academic officer at Winthrop and the report’s first author, said he and his colleagues had assumed that giving black post-menopausal women substantially more vitamin D than is recommended would decrease bone loss in that population. In fact, he said, many scientists hypothesized it would have this effect.

The authors said previous trials that “suggest a benefit of vitamin D supplementation have been conducted with white participants.”

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on July 26, 2005)

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