Supplemental Vitamin D and Incident Fractures in Midlife and Older Adults
Brigham and Women's Hospital · Harvard University · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Vitamin D supplements are widely recommended for bone health in the general population, but data on whether they prevent fractures have been inconsistent.
(2000 IU per day), n-3 fatty acids (1 g per day), or both would prevent cancer and cardiovascular disease in men 50 years of age or older and women 55 years of age or older in the United States. Participants were not recruited on the basis of vitamin D deficiency, low bone mass, or osteoporosis. Incident fractures were reported by participants on annual questionnaires and adjudicated by centralized medical-record review. The primary end points were incident total, nonvertebral, and hip fractures. Proportional-hazards models were used to estimate the treatment effect in intention-to-treat analyses.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.82
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 37
Authors
13- MSMeryl S. LeBoffCorresponding
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard University, Diabetes Australia, Norwegian Womens Public Health Association
- SHSharon H. Chou
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard University, Diabetes Australia, Norwegian Womens Public Health Association
- KAKristin A. Ratliff
Diabetes Australia, Norwegian Womens Public Health Association
- NRNancy R. Cook
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard University, General Department of Preventive Medicine, Norwegian Womens Public Health Association
- BKBharti Khurana
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard University, Norwegian Womens Public Health Association
Topics & keywords
- Vitamin D and neurology
- Bone health
- Medicine
- Gerontology
- Population
- Vitamin
- Osteoporosis
- Environmental health
- Good health and well-being