Recent research highlights three essential principles that should inform vitamin D supplementation decisions. First, the dose-response relationship is curvilinear rather than linear, meaning doubling your dose will not double your blood levels. Second, individual response to supplementation varies significantly based on baseline vitamin D status—those with deficient levels experience substantially greater increases from the same dose compared to those with adequate levels. Third, shelf-based selection of supplement doses ignores these critical personalized factors entirely. Rather than assuming all individuals benefit equally from standard supplement doses, evidence suggests that practitioners should establish baseline serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels before recommending supplementation. This personalized approach allows for targeted dosing strategies that account for individual metabolism and baseline status, ultimately improving both efficacy and safety of vitamin D supplementation.
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