- Navigating Your Midlife Crisis: Embracing New Possibilities
- City Raccoons Showing Signs of Domestication
- Mapping the Exposome: Science Broadens Focus to Environmental Disease Triggers
- One Week Less on Social Media Linked to Better Mental Health
- Your Brain Changes in Stages as You Age, Study Finds
- Some Suicide Victims Show No Typical Warning Signs, Study Finds
- ByHeart Formula Faces Lawsuits After Babies Sickened With Botulism
- Switch to Vegan Diet Could Cut Your Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Half
- Regular Bedtime Does Wonders for Blood Pressure
- Dining Alone Could Mean Worse Nutrition for Seniors
Too Little Vitamin D May Add to Obesity’s Burden

Severely obese people with vitamin D deficiency may be less mobile than those with normal levels of the vitamin, a new study says.
Poor physical functioning can reduce quality of life and increase the risk of early death, the researchers noted.
The study included 252 severely obese people who were timed as they walked 1,640 feet and climbed up and down a single step 50 times. The participants also gave blood samples and estimates of their levels of physical activity.
Those with the lowest vitamin D levels had the slowest walking times and the lowest amounts of physical activity, according to the study published April 15 in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
“People with severe obesity already are eight times more likely to have poor physical function than people with a healthy [body weight],” study co-author Tomas Ahern, of St. Columcille’s Hospital and St. Vincent’s University Hospital in Dublin, Ireland, said in a journal news release.
“Poor vitamin D status contributes to the deterioration of physical function in this population. Among those with severe obesity, 43 percent are at risk of vitamin D deficiency,” he added.
About 6.5 percent of American adults are severely obese, the study authors noted in the news release.
While the study doesn’t prove that lower levels of vitamin D curtail mobility, it does suggest a link might exist between the two.
Improving vitamin D status could be a simple matter of spending more time outside, because sun exposure can boost the body’s natural vitamin D production, Ahern said.
More information
The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about vitamin D.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.










