Tips for boosting your winter vitamin D levels and overall health
Courtney Carter
/ Categories: WELLNESS, 2024

Tips for boosting your winter vitamin D levels and overall health

Vitamin D is often called the ‘sunshine vitamin’ because it’s produced by our bodies when skin is exposed to sunlight. Thanks to limited winter daylight hours in the northeast, maintaining adequate vitamin D levels can be challenging and have very real consequences on our health.

Here are just a few of the ways vitamin D levels can impact your physical and mental health:

Bone Health: Vitamin D is essential for calcium absorption and bone mineralization. Without it, our bodies can absorb only 10 to 15% of the calcium we consume, which can cause our bones to become thin, brittle, or misshapen, leading to conditions like osteoporosis in adults and rickets in children.

Immune Function: Vitamin D helps modulate immune function, potentially reducing the risk of infections.

Chronic Disease Prevention: Adequate vitamin D levels may help reduce the risk of various chronic diseases, including type 2 diabetes and certain cancers.

Mental Health: Vitamin D is involved in brain development and deficiencies and can contribute to mental health issues, including depression, anxiety, irritability, and feelings of sadness.

Sleep Quality: Adequate vitamin D levels are associated with better sleep quality and regulation of the sleep-wake cycle. Fatigue and daytime sleepiness can be symptoms of Vitamin D deficiency.

The easiest way to combat low vitamin D levels is by taking a supplement. Current guidelines recommend taking 400-800 international units (IU) or 10–20 micrograms (mcg). However, your doctor may recommend taking more or less based on your age, skin color, current blood vitamin D levels, sun exposure, and more.

You can also boost your vitamin D intake by eating foods with high vitamin-D levels. These include:

  • Wild-raised salmon and oily fish

  • Egg yolks

  • Fortified milk and breakfast cereals

  • Cod liver oil

  • UV-exposed mushrooms

  • Vitamin-D-fortified cow, soy, and oat milk

  • Vitamin-D-fortified ready-to-eat cereals

When possible, spend time outdoors during daylight hours. Wearing sunscreen (as you should) will not impact your body's ability to produce vitamin D. 

In severe cases of deficiency, light therapy may be recommended.

By being proactive about vitamin D intake, you can help optimal levels of this crucial nutrient and support your overall health now and throughout the year.

 

Kristin Irace, RD, LDN, is a registered dietitian in in-patient, renal dialysis, oncology, and cardiac rehab services at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center.

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How to Become a Mask Wearer

Long before COVID-19, online chat groups for people with pulmonary fibrosis (PF) were filled with posts about how uncomfortable it is to wear a mask in public: not physically uncomfortable, a fact that was barely mentioned, but psychologically uncomfortable. For people with this condition or the lung transplant used to cure it, catching a cold or the flu could be deadly. They need to wear masks in public to help protect themselves from getting ill.

The participants discussed how awkward it is riding the bus in a mask, going to the grocery store in a mask, or boarding a plane while wearing one. They were mostly self-conscious that others would think they were ill or weak. Many would rather suffer the risk of getting fatally sick than put a mask on in a department store.

Now, we've all been directed to wear masks in public. Both Bennington and Wilmington's Select Boards have passed local mandates requiring masks in public places. This—along with distancing and handwashing—are crucial parts of returning to a more normal way of life. Suddenly, we are all feeling the psychological discomfort PF patients have felt for many years.

People usually have an interest in blending in. And, just like doing anything out of the ordinary, wearing a mask for the first time definitely feels like putting yourself out there. If we want to return to a somewhat normal way of life, masks are crucially important, along with frequent, thorough handwashing and keeping a distance from others.

Here are a few tips for making the leap from being someone nervous about wearing a mask to being a person who wears one regularly.

Do it for others. We know that people can spread COVID-19 as many as a few days before they get sick. Even if you feel fine, you could have COVID-19 right now without knowing it. At the same time, masks are far better at keeping sick people from spreading germs than they are at keeping people from getting sick. So wearing a mask isn't a sign of weakness; it's a sign of altruism. It's like saying, "I am not certain that I am not sick, so I want to pay those around me the consideration of limiting the likelihood I will infect them." Think of it as a badge of kindness.

Get a mask that fits. We know that masks are not completely comfortable physically. Getting the right fit makes a big difference in their "wearability." Cloth masks are readily available online and from local groups. The Green Mountain Mask Makers have excellent information and resources. If you can, purchase a few types in a few sizes to see which you like best. Buy enough of that type to allow washing between trips out in public.

Get a mask that you like. Once you have found a mask source and as long as you have a choice, pick one that you like. You can choose colors that match your wardrobe or that represent your interests, like camouflage. There are even masks that look like fashionable scarves when they hang around your neck. The sooner we start thinking of masks as part of our outfits, as essential and unremarkable as shoes or a belt, the healthier we will all be.

Try to quit caring about what others think. This one is hard. But one wise PF patient wrote, "I just don't give a darn!" Essentially, he shared that if people want to judge him for wearing a mask, so be it. Their opinions don't have a single thing to do with him. Many in the chat group applauded his confidence and vowed to adopt his attitude.

If we all do our best, soon the cultural scale will tip. Wearing a mask or not wearing one will cease to be a political statement. It will be normal. And thankfully, if wearing a mask in public, handwashing and sanitizing, and keeping our distance are all normal, going out into public again can be safe and normal too.

Donna Barron, RN, is the infection preventionist at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center.

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