Google Search for Hollis at Vitamin D Life got 1100 hits Jan 2016
Dr. Hollis is referenced many times in Vitamin D Life Overview of Vitamin D Before, During, and After Pregnancy
Attended a vitamin D conference in New Zealand Nov 2010
- CLICK HERE to download the 17 minute interview Audio only - 2 MBytes
Click on arrow below to listen to the interview
- CLICK HERE to see the video Dr. Hollis talking with trees moving the the background - 19 MBytes
Description of the conference
Vitamin D and its critical role in pregnancy, infancy and childhood will be canvassed at a symposium at the Albany campus on November 18.
Speakers include one of the world's leading researchers on vitamin D deficiency in infants and children, American paediatrician Professor Bruce Hollis, who will discuss findings from his recent research on vitamin D supplementation during pregnancy and breastfeeding. He is the director of Paediatric Sciences at the Medical University of South Carolina and has studied vitamin D metabolism and nutrition for the past 35 years.
Other speakers are Professor Caryl Nowson from Australia, who will talk on vitamin D in the New Zealand and Australian food supply, and Dr Pamela von Hurst, a Massey nutrition researcher, who will discuss the vitamin D status of young women and various ethnic groups in New Zealand.
Dr von Hurst, from the Institute of Food, Nutrition and Human Health, is the co-director of the University's new Vitamin D Research Centre, which is hosting the Wyeth Nutrition-sponsored symposium. She says the vital role of vitamin D in a wide range of health issues is becoming better understood.
Dr von Hurst and co-researcher Dr Cath Conlon will release findings of their recent survey on what New Zealand mothers and health professionals know and think about vitamin D – information they hope will help clarify new guidelines for safe sun exposure and suitable dietary sources of vitamin D.
Vitamin D is a hormone that regulates more than a tenth of human genes and plays a key role in skeletal health as well as ensuring cells throughout the body function. The sun is the primary source. Vitamin D deficiency is associated with osteoporosis, some cancers, multiple sclerosis, diabetes, insulin resistance, hypertension, heart disease, respiratory infections, muscle weakness, mood and cognitive function, infectious diseases such as influenza. "The list keeps growing," Dr von Hurst says.
The re-emergence of childhood rickets in New Zealand recently highlighted concerns about vitamin D deficiency. "It is only recently that there has been any acknowledgement that people living in countries like New Zealand and Australia could be vitamin D deficient. Unlike North America and Northern Europe, we do not have any significant fortification of the food supply with Vitamin D, probably because it has never been thought to be necessary.
"However, as the population becomes more compliant with the sun safety messages, and as lifestyles become more sedentary and less time is spent outdoors, it will not be surprising to see vitamin D levels dropping across the population. In some circles there is talk of a world-wide epidemic of vitamin DCo-Authored a book in June 2010
New Insights into Vitamin D During Pregnancy, Lactation & Early Infancy
Carol L. Wagner (Author), Sarah N. Taylor (Author), Bruce W. Hollis (Author). 166 pages $25
- the history of vitamin D and its link with rickets
- the discovery of vitamin D in the early twentieth century as the active component in cod liver oil that prevents rickets
- how changes in lifestyle have led to one of the largest epidemics of nutrient deficiency beginning in the late 20th century
- how our limited understanding about vitamin D set the stage for recommendations now associated with states of vitamin D deficiency
- the evolving understanding of vitamin D's function in the context of bone mineralization and development, and its effect on immune function
- how that understanding has influenced our views on vitamin D requirements
- the results of deficiency states during pregnancy and lactation
- the implications of that deficiency during early childhood and later adult life
- the controversies surrounding vitamin D supplementation
- what can be done by public health officials and health care professionals to prevent vitamin D deficiency today and in the future