SSurfing my favorite blogs this morning, I came across this article on Dr. Mercola's blog I want to share with you. I've always doubted all the hype about the sun being so harmful and now there's evidence that it's actually good for you.
This comes as no surprise to me. I love the sun — it makes me feel great! I grew up and lived in southern California until three years ago when I moved to Arizona. Because the weather is so great most of the year, I've spent most of my life outdoors and have never had any problems with the sun, except maybe a few freckles. Big deal!
As a kid and teeny bopper, Newport or Huntington Beach was our destination of choice. My friends and I would spend the entire day down there… we loved it. And in spite of being pretty fair skinned, I've had no problems. Oh sure, a few sunburns here and there, but only because of my own stupidity.
Sunscreen never appealed to me because it's loaded with chemicals I personally don't want in on or in my body. Yep, I've just always believed that anything that can make you feel so good can't be all bad.
So read this article… and decide what's best for you.
©Copyright 2006 Dr. Joseph Mercola. Printed with permission.
An American study scheduled for a June release compared the health
of some 1,200 female patients, some of whom took a vitamin D supplement
while others didn't.
The number of patients who reduced their risk of cancer by taking a vitamin D supplement -- 60 percent -- was so unexpectedly high that some initially believed it to be a typographical error.
This study, and many similar ones, may force conventional
medicine to re-evaluate its vitamin D recommendations. A deficiency in
vitamin D figures into many diseases in addition to cancer. One
researcher pointed out, "We don't really know what the status of
chronic disease is in the North American population, until we normalize vitamin D status."
Globe and Mail.com April 28, 2007
I just love when I do a major controversial video -- like the one I did on how sunlight can reduce your risk for cancer by 50 percent -- that many said was not true, and a few weeks later a MAJOR study is published confirming precisely what I was saying.
This has been a regular pattern now for many years. The truth is
obvious and as plain as day, and most of the time it does not line up
with conventional thinking on the topic. But given time, science seems
to catch up to the obvious as they have in this case.
So, after many clashes over countless years, conventional medicine may finally be on the verge of acknowledging the true value of vitamin D and how it can help you reduce your cancer risks.
As I pointed out in a video posted last month,
there is a relationship between latitude, sun exposure and mortality
rates associated with cancer, of particular importance to folks living
in Canada and the Northern United States (hence all the interest paid
to this critical health issue in a Toronto-based newspaper).
The best and safest way to get the right amount of vitamin D is through exposing your body to the right and safe amount of sunshine.
Should you need to take a supplement or cod liver oil to get the
vitamin D you need, however, please have the vitamin D levels in your blood checked often to avoid overdosing.
At least 21,000 Americans die each year from cancer associated
with inadequate vitamin D levels, and that number is probably an
underestimate. The real number very likely exceeds 50,000. And
those numbers refer solely to cancer; they do not even take into
account the many other illnesses associated with a vitamin D
deficiency.
The economic cost for treating these illnesses has been
estimated as being as high as $56 billion in the United States each
year, compared to just $6 billion for treating illnesses caused by
overexposure to sunlight.
You might want to think about that the next time someone
tells you that sunlight causes cancer -- while there are some cancer
risks associated with getting enough sun, they are far outweighed by
the incredible cancer-prevention benefits.