I don’t think I need to point out the danger in creating a just-so story in favor of your belief then approvingly citing sources that agree with your conclusion, while slamming sources that don’t give you the results you want.
There is literally a mountain of evidence for health effects of sunlight. Reality doesn’t reduce to some trivial little logical statement that you can test with a meta-analysis.
I’m sure you can see the problem with the argument that because sunlight increases vitamin D and sunlight has some beneficial health effects, then vitamin D supplementation has the same health benefits. This is a reasonable hypothesis to test, but it cannot be asserted as is without checking each step in the casual pathway. Without this crucial step it is nothing more than an just so story.
Vitamin D is the main known mechanism by which sunlight can effect health. That does not mean it is the only mechanism—there is some recent evidence for nitric oxide effects, for example—it just means it is the mechanism that is most understood and the most potent from what we know now.
This is not a just so story—research from the last 5-8 years or so has shown how vit D regulates gene expression in a host of tissues. The general theory that it is an input into a very large number of gene programs/networks is extremely solid.
Based on that foundation, the prior that vit D supplementation would have zero health effects should be very small. Of course that does not imply that the health effects are always positive!
Instead it merely implies that if you have a study which shows no effects—than by overwhelming probability—either they used too small a dose, or they happened to test something specific that vit D does not effect, or they made some more fundamental error.
There is literally a mountain of evidence for health effects of sunlight. Reality doesn’t reduce to some trivial little logical statement that you can test with a meta-analysis.
I’m sure you can see the problem with the argument that because sunlight increases vitamin D and sunlight has some beneficial health effects, then vitamin D supplementation has the same health benefits. This is a reasonable hypothesis to test, but it cannot be asserted as is without checking each step in the casual pathway. Without this crucial step it is nothing more than an just so story.
Vitamin D is the main known mechanism by which sunlight can effect health. That does not mean it is the only mechanism—there is some recent evidence for nitric oxide effects, for example—it just means it is the mechanism that is most understood and the most potent from what we know now.
This is not a just so story—research from the last 5-8 years or so has shown how vit D regulates gene expression in a host of tissues. The general theory that it is an input into a very large number of gene programs/networks is extremely solid.
Based on that foundation, the prior that vit D supplementation would have zero health effects should be very small. Of course that does not imply that the health effects are always positive!
Instead it merely implies that if you have a study which shows no effects—than by overwhelming probability—either they used too small a dose, or they happened to test something specific that vit D does not effect, or they made some more fundamental error.