Sun Exposure to the Skin is the Human Race's Natural, Intended, Most Effective and Most Neglected Source of Vitamin D
Vitamin D sufficiency, along with diet and
exercise, has emerged as one of the most important preventive factors in human
health. Hundreds of studies now link vitamin D deficiency with significantly
higher rates of many forms of cancer‚ as well as heart disease‚ osteoporosis‚
multiple sclerosis and many other conditions and diseases.
Because sunshine is a free commodity with no
publicist or lobbyist, the Sunshine Vitamin Alliance is established as a
coalition of right-minded physicians, individuals and organizations who
advocate natural vitamin D production through regular, non-burning sun
exposure.
- Humans
make 90 percent of our vitamin D naturally from sunlight exposure to our
skin – specifically, from ultraviolet B exposure to the skin, which
naturally initiates the conversion of cholesterol in the skin to vitamin
D3.
- Few
foods naturally contain or are fortified with supplemental vitamin D. For
example, an 8-ounce glass of whole milk is fortified with 100 IU
(international units) of vitamin D – just 10 percent of what the most
conservative vitamin D researchers now say we need daily. In contrast, sun
exposure to the skin makes thousands of units of vitamin D naturally in a
relatively short period of time.
- While
vitamin D supplements are an alternative means of producing vitamin D when
regular, non-burning sun exposure is not possible, oral supplementation of
vitamin D is not nature’s intended means of producing this vitamin.
- While
overexposure to sunlight carries risks, the cosmetic skin care industry
has misled the public into believing that any UV exposure is harmful. No
research has shown that regular, non-burning exposure to UV light poses a
significant risk of skin damage.
- Humans
spend less time in the sun today than at any point in human history –
which is why more than 1 billion people worldwide are vitamin D deficient.
Vitamin D Comes From the Sun
Sunlight is the best and only natural source
of vitamin D. Unlike dietary or supplementary vitamin D, when you get your ‘D’
from sunshine your body takes what it needs, and de-metabolizes any extra. That’s
critical – as vitamin D experts and many health groups now advocate 1,000 to
2,000 IU of vitamin D daily – five to ten times the old recommendations.
Because too much ‘D’ from dietary supplements may cause the body to
over-process calcium, nobody really knows for sure how much supplementary
vitamin D is safe. On the other hand, sunlight-induced vitamin D doesn’t have
that problem – it’s the way your body is intended to make it!


