Profitable Revelation! Inhabitants of the Affluent Western Hemisphere Don't Meet "Their" RDAs For Important Nutrients. "Scientists" Call to Action, I Call to Calm Down.

Image 1: Nothing sells like FDA-approved supplements and federally supported fortified foods. And whenever you want to sell more snake oil, just pay for another study on "nutrient deficiencies"
There are two things you can shovel truckloads of money with in the realms of dietary supplements and convenience foods. Those are dreams, such as the dream of a lean and muscular physique and FDA approved but for customers non-verifiable promises of  the absence of future ailments. And while such profane things as wanting to get big and buffed or even simply "looking good naked" is looked down upon by the majority of average Joes and Janes (I don't want to go into the underlying psychological reasons here ;-), the use of the latter is generally regarded as a useful if not necessary means that will not just help us preserve our health, but will also sooth our guilty conscious of not being able to break ourselves of our bad dietary habits. Against that background it's good that we have such great scientists and policy makers who will base their wise decisions on totally unbiased and all-encompassing scientific data from research teams such as as the one from DSM Nutritional Products Limited in Kaiseraugust, Switzerland, and Parsippany, NJ, USA (Troen. 2012).

On average, we are all the same, right!? Our governments obviously don't think so...

Morover, the decisions of those policy makers are not just rooted in science, they also hold another, maybe even more important good in highest esteem: Equality! And though, equality is one of the principles the Western civilization often boasts of, it seems as if when it comes to our dietary "needs", as defined by the individual dietary guidelines, you, my mostly American friends, must be somewhat different.
Figure 1: Reference intakes for selected vitamins in Germany, UK and the Netherlands expressed relative to the US RDA (data based on overview in Troesch. 2012)
This would at least be the logical conclusion you would have to draw based on the in parts pronounced differences between German and US RDAs (see figure 1), which would suggest that my I need ~30% more vitamin D than you do, while our friends in the UK either don't need it at all or cannot agree on a reference intake and my neighbors to the West, must assume that they get more than enough vitamin D from sunbathing at the beaches of the North Sea to get away with only 100IU of vitamin D per day; and their low recommendations for vitamin E are probably based on the rationale that they traditionally use beef fat instead of vegetable oils to fry their fries *rofl*

You are deficient, my friend! Go get your fortified foods ans supplements, NOW!

Now, as funny as that may seem, in the end these discrepancies only underline three fundamental problems that are rarely addressed when scientists analyze data to finally get to the (nutritional) root course of modern disease:
Want to learn about where you stand in terms of the RDA?

I got some help from my friends over at Highbrow Paleo, who felt the following tools are particularly helpful to estimate or calculate your daily micro- and macronutrient intakes:
You know that I am not a big believer in logging your food intake and making calories in vs.calories out calculations. So, for your own psychological well-being try not to get addicted to these tools only to end up as yet another food neurotic on certain bulletin-boards ;-)
  1. the RDAs are more or less arbitrary - While we do know pretty certain which dosage of a certain nutrient is vitally important, when everything else, i.e. nutrition, exercise, stress, etc. is "normal" (whatever that may be), we have almost no clue how deficiencies, let alone the overabundance of one nutrient affect the need / optimal intake of another. A good example here would be calcium - one of my favorites, by the way: While we are stuffing our elderly (in particular women) with calcium supplements to "protect" their bones with little success, Dawson-Hughes et al. have shown in 2009 already that you can effectively reduce bone resorption, i.e. the leeching of calcium from the bones, by supplemental potassium bicarbonate, while just throwing more calcium and vitamin D at older men and women will at best increase renal calcium excretion, at worst lead to kidney stones and vascular calcification (Dawson-Hughes. 2009)
     
  2. the RDAs are light years are usually one or two decades behind contemporary science - Despite being an outspoken critic of the current vitamin D hysteria, the absence of a concrete RDA for vitamin D in the UK is just one of the most obvious examples of how the endless discussions of top-class experts lead to an grossly negligent gap between the latest results from scientific research (which in and out of itself often take months to be published and years or decades to be accepted) and their concrete implementation into the guidelines.
     
  3. the RDAs lack any regard of individuality or specificity - although the different RDA's in the USA, Germany, the UK and the Netherlands would suggest otherwise, you are all identical clones of an imaginary average Joe or Jane for the policy makers; and as if that was not enough, the same applies for the nutrients as well: "Vitamin A? Yeah, that's beta carotene, right?" And vitamin A vs. carotene (even alpha vs. beta caroetene) is only one of the many examples (others are folate vs. folic acid; alpha tocopherol usually equated with "vitamin E" vs. gamma-tocopherol, let alon the tocotrienols, etc.), for which we know by now that lumping them together under common names, can easily lead to imbalances with pathological consequences.
Against that background my rationale for posting the following data on what scientists believe Mr. and Mrs. average US/UK/GER/NL citizen are missing out on and of which nutrients they may in fact get plenty is to create an incentive to take a couple of minutes and plug your own food data into one of the countless free online devices (see red box above for some references) to see where you as an individual are standing - and I bet, the majority of you will see results that are fundamentally different from those Troesch et al. summarize in their paper:
  • Vitamin D: Irrespective of whether or not you believe that it does make sense to consume the lion's share of a "vitamin" that is supposed to be produced in your skin and is thus, due to its actions on almost every cell of your body, essentially not a vitamin, but a hormone, it is somewhat alarming that even in the Netherlands, where the RDA is hilarious 100IU 5-25% of the men and 25-50% of the women fail to achieve their recommended daily allowance - 2 1/2 large egg yolks alone would provide them with more than that! With the higher RDA's in Germany and the USA, the percentage of people who do not meet their daily allowances is >75%!
  • Vitamin A: I am by no means surprised that vitamin A is not mentioned in the scientists mini-summary in the abstract. After all, it's bad for you! Right? No... freaking, no! And it's certainly likewise not good for way more 75% of the US citizens not to meet their RDAs for vitamin A and that despite the fact that the scientists lumped all "vitamins A" together! In the Netherlands and the UK, ~50% have an adequate intake and over here in Germany only 25-50% of my the average Joes and Janes are below their RDA cut-off, which could, just as the vitamin D problem by the way, readily be solved by eating a piece of liver from time to time. Some fatty fish, eggs and of course vegetables on a daily basis would yet serve the same purpose and would, which may turn out to be of even greater importance deliver a very balanced spectrum of various forms of pre-vitamin A (carotenes) and retinol.
  • Figure 2: Changes in reasoning behind supplement use in 2010 (French. 2011)
    Folic Acid and other B-vitamins: An interesting observation can be made for the B-vitamins, where the citizens of the land of both fast food and eager food-intoxi.... ah, I mean "fortification" (obviously the US) appear to be way better off than their poor fellows in Europe. Especially here in Germany, we should really wonder that we are not much sicker than you, after all, not all our products are enriched with high amounts of bio-unavailable folic acid so that we more than 75% of us do not meet our RDAs for this unquestionably important, but in its unnatural supplemental form not very controversial vitamin. In 2006, for example, Troen et al. report reduced immune function from excess folic acid build-up in the blood of post-menopausal women (Troen. 2006) and Halsted reports in a more recent paper that the "widespread use of supplemental multivitamins" in conjunction with the "fortification of the US diet with folic acid has resulted in high serum ... "[...] folate levels in much of the population" (Halsted. 2008)
    high folate levels that have been associated with increased risk of cognitive decline in aging people with low vitamin B12 status, decreased natural killer T-cell immune function and increased risk of recurrent advanced precancerous colorectal adenomas and breast cancer" (Halsted. 2008)
    Against this background it should be allowed to ask, whether the "average American" with his "adequate" (>95%!) folic acid intake really is better off than the "average German" who is unlikely to get his RDA of folic acid (>75%). 
For the scientists who (surprise!) happen to work for DSM Nutritional Products Ltd., the observations they present in form of stylized "traffic lights", with all those yellow and red "lights" signifying impeding danger and the need to take action, suffice to conclude that there is not just a gap "between vitamin intakes and requirements for a significant proportion of the population even in the most affluent countries", but that the latter would also be "a call to action 100 years after the term 'vitamine' [sic!] was coined" (Troesch. 2012)
If this post got you interested in an in-depth look at nutrient fortification its uses, abuses, benefits and downsides, I suggest you check Paul Jaminet's article on the issue at his "Perfect Health Diet Blog" (Jaminet. 2012). It would be pointless for me to repeat what Paul has already laid out in his concise and - as us physicists like it - well-referenced summary ;-)
And while Mrs Troesch and her co-authors do not state that explicitly, it should be obvious what this "call to action" will amount to... !? Right! More nutrient "fortified" foods and more randomly assembled multi-vitamin products, instead of less junk and more health (=real) food in everyone's diet.

References:
  1. Dawson-Hughes B, Harris SS, Palermo NJ, Castaneda-Sceppa C, Rasmussen HM, Dallal GE. Treatment with potassium bicarbonate lowers calcium excretion and bone resorption in older men and women. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2009 Jan;94(1):96-102.
  2. Halsted CH. Perspectives on obesity and sweeteners, folic acid fortification and vitamin D requirements. Fam Pract. 2008 Dec;25 Suppl 1:i44-9. Epub 2008 Sep 30. Review. 
  3. Jaminet, Paul. Food Fortification: A Risky Experiment? PerfectHealthDiet.com. March 23, 2012 < http://perfecthealthdiet.com/2012/03/food-fortification-a-risky-experiment/ > retrieved on June 18, 2012.
  4. French S. Natural Marketing Institute. The US Botanical Market: Latest Consumer Insights. Natural Marketing Institute. March 2011.
  5. Troen AM, Mitchell B, Sorensen B, Wener MH, Johnston A, Wood B, Selhub J, McTiernan A, Yasui Y, Oral E, Potter JD, Ulrich CM. Unmetabolized folic acid in plasma is associated with reduced natural killer cell cytotoxicity among postmenopausal women. J Nutr. 2006 Jan;136(1):189-94.
  6. Troesch B, Hoeft B, McBurney M, Eggersdorfer M, Weber P. Dietary surveys indicate vitamin intakes below recommendations are common in representative Western countries. Br J Nutr. 2012 Jun 13:1-7.