UK study to research vitamin D coronavirus link

Youngsters on a circular swing in an amusement park at sunset, Athens, Greece, July 6, 2010. (Reuters)
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Updated 14 October 2020
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UK study to research vitamin D coronavirus link

  • Lead researcher: ‘There is mounting evidence that vitamin D might reduce the risk of respiratory infections’
  • Chief investigator: Trial has potential to help world battle pandemic

LONDON: A UK university is launching a major study into the potential link between vitamin D and protection against coronavirus.


The “Coronavit trial” will involve academics from Queen Mary University of London questioning whether increased vitamin D levels can lower the risk of winter respiratory infections, including coronavirus.


The project, funded by Barts Charity, a UK hospital fund, looks to test more than 5,000 people who will be sent vitamin D supplements by mail, avoiding the need for face-to-face contact.


“There is mounting evidence that vitamin D might reduce the risk of respiratory infections,” said the study’s lead researcher Prof. Adrian Martineau.


“Vitamin D deficiency is more common in older people, in people who are overweight, and in black and Asian people — all the groups who are at increased risk of becoming ill from the coronavirus.”


Dr. David Jolliffe, the project’s chief investigator, said the study has the potential to help the world battle the pandemic.


“Vitamin D supplements are low in cost, low in risk and widely accessible. If proven effective, they could significantly aid our global fight against the virus,” he added.


The UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence said in June that there was insufficient evidence to conclude that vitamin D supplements work against coronavirus.


Vitamin D is often referred to as the “sunshine vitamin” because the body creates it when exposed to sunlight.

It keeps bones, teeth and muscles in good shape by maintaining healthy calcium and phosphate levels.


UK to double troops in Norway to defend against ‘rising’ Russian threat

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UK to double troops in Norway to defend against ‘rising’ Russian threat

  • Healey is set to confirm on a visit to a UK military site in northern Norway that British forces

LONDON: Britain announced Wednesday it will boost its troops stationed in Norway and play a “vital” role in a NATO Arctic mission in face of “rising Russian threats.”
The UK’s decision to double its troops in Norway from 1,000 to 2,000 in the next three years comes as the US was set to relinquish two top regional NATO command posts to press allies to take greater responsibility for their defense.
“Arctic and High North security will be strengthened against rising Russian threats as Britain steps up its presence in the region,” the UK Ministry of Defense said in a statement.
Defense Secretary John Healey is set to confirm on a visit to a UK military site in northern Norway that British forces will be involved in NATO’s Arctic Sentry mission to bolster security in the region.
European members of the transatlantic alliance have scrambled to boost defenses in the region after US President Donald Trump used alleged threats from Russia and China to justify his repeated threats to seize Greenland.
“Demands on defense are rising, and Russia poses the greatest threat to Arctic and High North security that we have seen since the Cold War,” Healey said in a statement.
Diplomats confirmed over the weekend that Washington would hand over leadership of its Norfolk command, focusing on the alliance’s north, to Britain.
The UK and Norway last December signed a new defense pact that would see their navies jointly operate a warship fleet to “hunt Russian submarines” in the North Atlantic.
That agreement aimed to protect critical undersea infrastructure such as communications cables, which Western officials say are increasingly under threat from Moscow.
Oslo also announced last year the purchase of at least five Type-26 frigates from Britain for £10 billion ($13 billion).
In 2023, the UK opened a new military base called Camp Viking in the far north of Norway, which serves as a hub for Britain’s Royal Marines.
Britain is planning to lead a Joint Expeditionary Force (JEF) of northern European and Baltic nations in “major military activity” in September.
The exercise called “Lion Protector” will see “air, land, and naval forces from JEF nations train to protect critical national infrastructure from attacks and sabotage.”
A cross-party delegation of United States senators visited Greenland on Monday to “rebuild the trust” shattered by Trump’s threats to annex the Danish territory, the lawmakers said.