Assessing the population impact of low rates of vitamin D supplementation on type 1 diabetes using a new statistical method

  • Zipitis C
  • Mughal Z
  • Clayton P
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Abstract

Vitamin D supplementation for all children <5 is recommended by the UK Department of Health for its skeletal effects. Vitamin D is also linked with a number of extra-skeletal effects; one of them being protection against type 1 diabetes. With a rapid increase in the incidence of type 1 diabetes and the associated costs, measures of curtailing the rapid increase of type 1 diabetes are needed. In this review, we look at type 1 diabetes using a statistical method (PIN-ER-t) and published data in an attempt to quantify the impact on the population of babies born in 2012 of increasing vitamin D supplementation rates. Calculations show that for the population of 729,674 babies born in England and Wales in 2012, 374 cases of type 1 diabetes (out of 1357 total predicted) could be prevented over 18 years if all were supplemented with vitamin D. This could lead to savings in excess of £62 million for the cohort. This piece of work adds to the argument for studying the potential link between vitamin D supplementation and type 1 diabetes further.

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Zipitis, C. S., Mughal, Z. M., & Clayton, P. E. (2016). Assessing the population impact of low rates of vitamin D supplementation on type 1 diabetes using a new statistical method. JRSM Open, 7(11), 205427041665352. https://doi.org/10.1177/2054270416653522

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