The Big Vitamin D Mistake
In 2011, the FDA and Institute of Medicine set the recommended daily intake for vitamin D at 600 IU, designed to protect 97.5% of the population. Three years later, statisticians discovered a calculation error that undermined the entire recommendation. The mistake wasn't biological — it was mathematical. Was the target off by a little, or did the miscalculation leave millions of people dangerously deficient?
Punti chiave
The Institute of Medicine miscalculated the RDA by analyzing study averages instead of individual variation, causing the recommendation to miss the target for most people.
Reanalysis of the same 2011 data shows that 8,895 IU per day — not 600 IU — is required to bring 97.5% of the population to the 20 ng/mL baseline.
Canadian studies reveal 10–15% of supplement users remain deficient under the current RDA, far above the intended 2.5% failure rate.
Large-scale meta-analysis shows all-cause mortality drops as vitamin D rises and flattens around 40 ng/mL, suggesting the current target of 20 is too low for optimal health.
Individual absorption varies by weight, skin color, and location; the only reliable way to ensure optimal vitamin D levels (50–100 ng/mL) is regular blood testing.
In breve
The official vitamin D recommendation of 600 IU per day is based on a statistical error; correct analysis of the same data suggests nearly 9,000 IU may be needed to protect 97.5% of the population, and real-world studies confirm widespread deficiency even among those supplementing.
The RDA Definition and the 2011 Target
The RDA is designed to meet 97.5% of people's needs, not just the average.
The recommended dietary allowance (RDA) is not simply the amount the average person needs. It is defined as the nutrient intake sufficient to meet the requirements for 97.5% of healthy people — a safety net meant to cover almost everyone. In 2011, the Institute of Medicine set the vitamin D RDA at 600 international units per day, targeting a blood serum level of 20 nanograms per milliliter. This level was deemed necessary for bone health and disease prevention.
The scientists based their calculation on 10 supplementation studies yielding 32 different averages. They plotted these study averages on a graph, drew a line through them, and estimated that 600 IU would achieve an average level of 25 ng/mL. Because the average exceeded the 20 ng/mL target and the lower end of the prediction interval hovered near 20, they concluded that 600 IU was sufficient for the vast majority. That assumption, however, was fundamentally flawed.
The Statistical Error: Averages vs. Individuals
The IOM analyzed study averages, not individual variation, missing the true dose required.
The Statistical Error: Averages vs. Individuals
The Institute of Medicine looked at study averages instead of individual variations within those studies. When setting an RDA, you must predict what the person with the highest needs requires, ensuring the bottom 2.5% of the population crosses the finish line. The correct interpretation shows that if everyone takes 600 IU per day, 97.5% of individuals will have levels above 10 ng/mL — not 20 — leaving a huge chunk of the population deficient.
The Corrected Calculation
Reanalysis of the same data yields a dramatically higher requirement: 8,895 IU per day.
Real-World Evidence of Underdosing
Canadian studies show widespread deficiency even among those following the official guidelines.
Two studies conducted in Canada reveal that despite people taking the recommended supplements, a significant number have vitamin D levels below the target. If the RDA was working as intended, fewer than 2.5% should be deficient. In reality, 10 to 15% of participants who are supplementing still fall short. This proves the current public health target is not being met and that the 600 IU recommendation leaves many people in the danger zone for bone health and disease prevention.
The Mortality Curve and Optimal Levels
Meta-analysis shows mortality drops as vitamin D rises, flattening around 40 ng/mL.
What You Should Do: Measure, Don't Guess
Persone
Glossario
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