ARCHIVED - Percentage of Adults with a Usual Intake of Vitamin D below the Estimated Average Requirement (EAR) in Canada

Percentage of Adults Age 19 and Over with a Usual Intake of Vitamin D below the Estimated Average Requirement, Canada, 2004

Percentage of Adults Age 19 and Over with a Usual Intake of Vitamin D below the EAR, Canada, 2004

Canada’s Nutrition and Health Atlas
Source: Statistics Canada, CCHS 2.2

Please Note: The CCHS 2.2 does not include data from the Northwest Territories, Yukon Territory or Nunavut. However, the target population covered by the survey represents approximately 98% of the population of the 10 provinces and is thus considered a national survey.

Percentage of adults age 19 and over with a usual intake of vitamin D below the EAR (both males and females)
Province
Newfoundland & Labrador 94.1
Prince Edward Island 83.7
Nova Scotia 87.6
New Brunswick 90.6
Quebec 86.5
Ontario 92.4
Manitoba 93.0
Saskatchewan 90.1
Alberta 93.5
British Columbia 84.4
All of Canada 89.3

Download these data as a Microsoft Excel file. The Excel file also contains a confidence interval and coefficient of variation for each estimate. This information contributes to a better understanding of the estimates.

Notes

Estimates of the prevalence of inadequate intakes of vitamin D from food must be interpreted with caution. Vitamin D is unique as it can also be synthesized by the body from sunlight (UV radiation). In addition, vitamin D intake from supplements has not been considered in this assessment (although information on intakes of vitamin D from food and supplements is available). While there appears to be a high prevalence of inadequate intakes of vitamin D from dietary sources, available clinical measures do not suggest wide-spread vitamin D deficiency in the Canadian population.Footnote 1,Footnote 2. Vitamin D status in some sub-populations, however, may warrant further consideration.

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