Lack of sun poses danger in our twilight years

Tuesday 25 November 2003

Vitamin D deficiency has been linked to falls and injuries in elderly women living in residential care in Australia, a Melbourne University study has found.
This is the first major study to show that vitamin D levels predict the risk of falls among such women.

"The solution to vitamin D deficiency may simply be supplying safe and readily available vitamin D supplements," says chief investigator in the study, Professor John Wark.

The study found that 22 percent of hostel residents and a staggering 45 percent of residents in nursing homes suffer from vitamin D deficiency. Vitamin D is synthesized in the skin during sun exposure. It helps to absorb dietary calcium and is vital in forming and maintaining strong bones.

The study was published in the November 2003 issue of the prestigious Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

"Most of us are able to get our daily requirement for vitamin D from sun exposure plus a small amount from our diets. For elderly people in residential care, this is more problematic as most have impaired mobility, therefore more difficulty getting outdoors," says Professor Wark.

"In addition, the skin of elderly people is less effective at producing vitamin D, further compounding the problem. In Australia, there are few dietary sources for vitamin D, so it is very difficult to make up for the lack of vitamin D production in the skin of people with very restricted sunlight exposure," he says.
"Vitamin D supplements should generally prevent this problem and should be used more widely," he says.

We have known for a long time that adequate vitamin D levels are needed for healthy bones. While other conditions such as impaired cognition and medications are known risk factors for falls, this new study, along with other recent research, indicates that muscle strength and avoidance of falls also require adequate vitamin D stores in the body.

As your vitamin D levels decrease the chance that you will fall increases. In fact, vitamin D deficiency is doubly risky, because it increases the risk of falling and it reduces the strength of bone to withstand breaking due to falls.

It is estimated that the health care cost of falls in the elderly in the mid-1990s was about $406 million per year. This figure has been increasing over the past few years and is expected to continue to rise if the situation continues unchecked.

Osteoporosis Australia suggest that preventive measures, such as vitamin D supplementation, hold the potential for significant savings in health care costs, in addition to reducing the burden of suffering for the elderly.

Vitamin D deficiency can lead to bone diseases, including osteoporosis, that weaken bone. Osteoporosis is the progressive thinning of bone tissue. It is common among the ageing and elderly, with studies estimating that 50 year old women have an almost 60% chance of suffering from an osteoporosis-related fracture in the remainder of their lives. The importance of osteoporosis has been recognized nationally by the listing of musculoskeletal conditions as a national priority health area by the Australian government.

Date Created: 24 March 2003
Last Modified: Wed, 8 Oct 2003 11:12:46 +1000
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More information about this article:
Jason Major
Media Liaison
jmajor@unimelb.edu.au
8344 0181
Professor John Wark
Dept of Medicine (RMH/WH), Uni of Melbourne
03 8344 5201
Email: jdwark@unimelb.edu.au
Fiona Wellby
Communications Manager, Department of Medicine (RMH/WH)
03 8344 3278
0403 883 762
email: fwellby@unimelb.edu.au

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