A recent comprehensive study conducted in Sweden has shed light on the vitamin D status of young children in the aftermath of a significant expansion in the country’s mandatory vitamin D fortification program. Covering a substantial cohort of over 1,800 infants and toddlers, this research delves into not only dietary intake and biochemical sufficiency but also examines the environmental implications tied to the primary dietary sources of this crucial nutrient. The findings reveal a reassuring overall sufficiency in vitamin D levels among the population while simultaneously highlighting the climate burden linked to certain vitamin D-rich foods.
Vitamin D, a fat-soluble secosteroid, is indispensable for the proper formation and maintenance of healthy bones and teeth primarily through its role in calcium homeostasis and bone metabolism. Despite its importance, vitamin D deficiency is a global concern due to limited natural dietary sources and varying degrees of skin synthesis dependent on sunlight exposure. In regions like Sweden, where sun exposure is seasonally limited, strategies such as dietary fortification and supplementation become central to public health policies aimed at preventing deficiency, especially among vulnerable groups like infants and young children.
The study draws upon data collected through the Riksmaten småbarn survey spanning 2021 to 2024, encompassing 1,074 children aged 18 months and 746 children aged four years. This dataset captures dietary intake, vitamin D supplementation practices, and serum vitamin D concentrations, providing a robust framework to assess the effectiveness of the fortification program implemented in 2018. The enforced fortification targets specific food categories including dairy products, cereals, and spreads, with the goal of elevating population-wide intake.
Remarkably, despite a fraction of children—16% in the younger cohort and a notable 61% of four-year-olds—registering vitamin D intake below the estimated average requirement of 7.5 micrograms per day, the prevalence of biochemical deficiency was nonexistent. Vitamin D sufficiency was found in 93% of the 18-month-olds and 96% of the four-year-olds based on serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations, indicating that current dietary strategies, when combined with supplemental drops in infancy, are effective in maintaining adequate vitamin D status.
The primary sources of vitamin D for infants at 18 months included vitamin D drops and fortified dairy products alongside porridge and cereals. As children aged to four years, their vitamin D intake leaned more heavily towards fortified dairy products and fortified spreads. This transition reflects changes in dietary habits and decreased dependence on supplementation as children grow older, emphasizing the crucial role of fortified foods in maintaining nutrient adequacy.
However, a nuanced challenge presents itself when considering the environmental ramifications of these dietary sources. Dairy production, a significant contributor to the Swedish fortification efforts, is associated with considerable greenhouse gas emissions, raising concerns about the sustainability of relying heavily on animal-derived foods for essential nutrients. In contrast, the study identifies fortified spreads and plant-based alternatives as more climate-friendly vitamin D sources, presenting a potential pathway to harmonize nutritional adequacy with environmental stewardship.
The study’s findings, published in Nutrition Journal and led by dietician and doctoral researcher André Hesselink of the University of Gothenburg, underscore the dual imperative of optimizing public health nutrition while mitigating environmental impact. Hesselink notes the critical role of fortified dairy products in ensuring vitamin D sufficiency, especially during the post-supplementation stage in early childhood, and illuminates opportunities for expanding the use of fortified plant-based foods to reduce the dietary carbon footprint.
Methodologically, the research adopts an observational study design, leveraging dietary recalls and biomarker analyses, combined with life cycle assessment data to evaluate climate impact. This integrative approach enables a multifaceted understanding that links nutritional epidemiology with environmental sustainability metrics—an emerging priority for food policy development in the era of climate change.
Considering the biochemical pathways involved, vitamin D undergoes synthesis in the skin under ultraviolet B radiation or is obtained through dietary sources. It is metabolized in the liver to 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D], the circulating biomarker commonly measured to assess vitamin D status, and subsequently hydroxylated in the kidney to its active form, calcitriol. Deficiency can lead to rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults, signifying the need for vigilance in nutritional monitoring, especially when natural synthesis is limited.
The study’s implications extend beyond Sweden, providing a model for how mandatory food fortification programs can be adapted and scaled in high-latitude countries where endogenous vitamin D synthesis is insufficient for much of the year. It also opens discourse on balancing fortification policies with the overarching goal of reducing agriculture-related emissions, prompting consideration of consumer acceptance and nutritional efficacy of plant-based fortification vehicles.
Notably, the research also raises questions about long-term adherence to supplementation regimes and dietary patterns among toddlers and preschool children. As the reliance on supplements diminishes with age, fortified foods assume greater importance, necessitating continuous public health messaging and innovation in food technology to maintain and improve micronutrient status without exacerbating environmental costs.
In conclusion, this comprehensive study not only reaffirms the effectiveness of expanded vitamin D fortification programs in securing sufficiency among young children in Sweden but also spotlights the pivotal role of sustainable dietary sources. Transitioning toward fortified plant-based alternatives emerges as a promising strategy to safeguard public health while aligning with climate action goals. Future research pathways will likely focus on optimizing fortification formulations, consumer behavior interventions, and integrating environmental impact assessments into nutritional policy frameworks worldwide.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: High proportion of young children are vitamin D sufficient after expansion of Sweden’s mandatory fortification but dairy products also contribute to a high climate impact
News Publication Date: 1-Apr-2026
Web References: 10.1186/s12937-026-01318-6
Image Credits: University of Gothenburg – Photo: André Hesselink
Keywords: vitamin D, fortification, infants, Sweden, nutritional epidemiology, dairy products, plant-based alternatives, greenhouse gas emissions, sustainability, public health nutrition

