The Sunlight Solution is a wealth of knowledge about the history of vitamin D. Even I, who have studied this topic my whole career, learned a significant amount about the history. Also, the practical knowledge in this text will aid in maintaining the health of the general public.-BRUCE W. HOLLIS, Ph.D., Professor of Pediatrics, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology; Director of Pediatric Nutritional Sciences, The Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SCIn her book, Sunlight Solution, Laurie Winn Carlson shines light on the health benefits of sun exposure and vitamin D. This easy read reviews the history of vitamin D and puts into perspective how humans have always depended upon the sun for their vitamin D requirement and how pollution and negative attitudes about sun exposure have resulted in an epidemic of vitamin D deficiency. She provides anecdotes about some of the nonspecific symptoms associated with vitamin D deficiency and the dramatic improvement that can occur in the symptoms by simply correcting the deficiency. The reader will be enlightened by the historical perspective and how our sun-phobic attitudes have resulted in this insidious vitamin D deficiency.-DR. MICHAEL F. HOLICK, Boston University School of MedicineSunlight is a vital component of good health. Like plants that thrive in the sun, we humans too depend on sunlight, in our case for the production of Vitamin D. In the past few decades, however, cultural trends have steered us away from sun exposure. From fear of the potential dangers of UV radiation and the heavy promotion of sunscreen products to artificial work and recreational environments centered on virtual reality, we are all spending much more time indoors and away from the sun. What are the health consequences?In this informative overview of an often-neglected topic, historian Laurie Winn Carlson examines the historical and cultural factors that have created our indoor lifestyles and the medical evidence that suggests we need to get out in the sun.She begins by tracing the behavior patterns that have caused a shift indoors. She notes that it was common decades ago for children to spend hours playing outside. Now the lure of video games and heavy sunscreen use have changed all that. Adults, also, live and work in the perpetual twilight of electric lighting. Though we feel comfortable, there is evidence that our bodies have not really adjusted to a lifestyle that is less than a century old.Carlson explains the growing body of research that challenges government and health industry warnings against the dangers of sunlight. For example, the production of Vitamin D from sun exposure is crucial to maintaining the body's calcium levels, an important factor for healthy bones, especially as we age. There is also evidence of the sun's beneficial effects on psychological disorders such as seasonal depression or difficulty sleeping.She concludes by arguing for a balanced approach to sun exposure. Although the risk of skin cancers should not be ignored, total avoidance of the sun can be just as risky to our health.Laurie Winn Carlson (Dallas, OR) is an adjunct assistant professor of history at Western Oregon University and the author of twenty books including William J. Spillman and the Birth of Agricultural Economics and A Fever in Salem: A New Interpretation of the New England Witch Trials.
Offers a vision of hope and a plan to begin the long journey to energy independence and global healing within the next ten years.
Electricity from Sunlight: The Photovoltaic Solution
This is a loving, heartwarming story written from the author's heart, encouraging all grandparents worldwide to spend time with their grandchildren, thus spreading sunshine in their lives.
We have many people to thank for making it possible to produce this encore to the 1995 cookbook Six O'Clock Solutions. FIRST, OUR THANKS TO THE FANS who loved that book, and told us so in no uncertain terms — in words of praise and in ...
Project Sherwood: The U.S. Program in Controlled Fusion, by Amasa S. Bishop (Addison-Wesley, 1958) The story of America's early ... Fusion: Science, Politics, and the Invention of a New Energy Source, by Joan Lisa Bromberg (MIT Press, ...
The Willi-Waw lay in the passage between the shore-reef and the outer-reef. From the latter came the low murmur of a lazy surf, but the sheltered stretch of water, not...
Settle in for a thrill-a-minute journey to the land of the ancient Incans in H. Rider Haggard's novel The Virgin of the Sun.
"Sun Protection in Man" looks at the beneficial and harmful effects of solar radiation.
In 'Klara and the Sun', Kazuo Ishiguro looks at our rapidly-changing modern world through the eyes of an unforgettable narrator to explore a fundamental question: what does it mean to love?
Vitamin D deficiency is the most common medical condition in the world. Recent research indicates that 23 per cent of Australians have some degree of vitamin D deficiency, including up...