VA found less testing for vitamin D resulted in increased health costs
Vitamin D Testing Patterns Among Six Veterans Medical Centers in the Southeastern United States: Links With Medical Costs
Bailey, Beth A.1; Manning, Todd2; Peiris, Alan N.3 [email protected] ==> [email protected]
1: Department of Family Medicine, East Tennessee State University, P.O. Box 70621, Johnson City, TN 37614.
2: Mountain Home VAMC, Johnson City, TN 37684.
3: Mountain Home VAMC, Medicine Service-111, Mountain Home, TN 37684.
Military Medicine, Volume 177, Number 1, January 2012 , pp. 70-76(7)
Color display of data in a Nursing honors thesis: by YUISA M. COLÓN

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Veterans have a profound degree of vitamin D deficiency that may contribute to adverse health outcomes.
Some veterans, especially African Americans at high risk of vitamin D deficiency, may not be receiving appropriate attention.
We hypothesized variations in vitamin D status and monitoring across six different VAMCs and that these differences are associated with health care costs.
A retrospective analysis of the medical data in the Veterans Integrated Service Network 9 (Southeastern United States) was performed, yielding a sample of 15,340 veterans .
Monitoring of vitamin D, vitamin D levels, and medical costs and services in all categories varied greatly by site.
Memphis tested vitamin D levels less often despite the increased minority presence and high levels of deficiency.
Vitamin D deficiency and lack of monitoring predicted increased inpatient health care costs at all sites, but did not fully account for site-cost variations in controlled analyses.
Vitamin D deficiency remains a significant problem among veterans in the Southeastern United States and is closely linked to increased health care costs.
We recommend protocols that recognize site differences and facilitate testing and monitoring of vitamin D levels, especially in high-risk groups of veterans.
See also Vitamin D Life
Perhaps 4,000 dollars annual less health care costs if supplement with 5 dollars of Vitamin D
- Chart of VA hospital data of current study compared with German hospital data published in 2017

- Another VA study
Vitamin D might reduce military costs for UC and CD – June 2011 many of the same authors
Black veterans have worse health and low vitamin D, yet are not tested as much – June 2011 many of the same authors
Virtually all veterans in ICU had vitamin D less than 32 ng – Jan 2011
3X less Multiple Sclerosis with enough vitamin D - Veterans Administration
Hospital stay 6 days longer for nursing home residents with low vitamin D – Oct 2011
Staph infection reduced 50 percent when have more than 30 ng of vitamin D – Aug 2011
MRSA inpatient cost 2X higher if less than 20 ng vitamin D – June 2011
How to reduce hospital infections with vitamin D – April 2012
VA showed increased vitamin D testing associated with lower health costs - Lancet May 2012 many of the same authors
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