“…Nowadays, it is more readily accepted that humans are different from rats, as a species as well as in terms of weight for determining treatment doses, and that rickets prevention is not the only vitamin D action to be taken into account. The daily requirement does of course depend on what the optimal target 25-OH-D serum level is considered to be: for a 25-OH-D serum level of 50 nmol/liter, 800-1000 IU/day of vitamin D appears sufficient, but to bring most people above the 75 nmol/liter level, a dosage of between 1000 and 4000 IU/day (depending on the individual, but on average 2000 IU/day) is required [Heaney et al 2003a[Heaney et al , 2009Grant and Holick, 2005;Hollis, 2005;BischoffFerrari et al 2006BischoffFerrari et al , 2009bBischoffFerrari et al , 2012Vieth, 2006;Hall et al 2010;Schwalfenberg et al 2010;Whiting and Calvo, 2010;Cashman et al 2011;Garrett-Mayer et al 2012;Holick, 2011Holick, , 2012. However, vitamin D intake via (unfortified) food is very marginal in normal Western diets, even in those considered well balanced, and generally provides less than 100-200 IU/day, rarely reaching little more than 400 IU/day with fortified food [Calvo et al 2004;Moore et al 2005;Välimäki et al 2007;O'Donnell et al 2008;Vatanparast et al 2010;von Geldern and Mowry, 2012].…”