Utah Valley Pediatrics  


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Utah Valley Pediatrics strives to keep parents up to date on the latest health topics and advisories. Our newsletter covers medicine changes and news, pediatric news, seasonal and age specific topics and what's new at Utah Valley Pediatrics.

 

Archives

December 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 6

October 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 5

August 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 4

June 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 3

April 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 2

February 2011
Vol. 5 Issue 1

Winter 2011
Vol. 4 Issue 4

Fall 2010
Vol. 4 Issue 3

Summer 2010
Vol. 4 Issue 2

Spring 2010
Vol. 4 Issue 1

Winter 2010
Vol. 3 Issue 4

Fall 2009
Vol. 3 Issue 3

Summer 2009
Vol. 3 Issue 2

Spring 2009
Vol. 3 Issue 1

Winter 2009
Vol. 2 Issue 4

Flu and Cold Alert 2008
Vol. 2 Issue 3

Fall 2008
Vol. 2 Issue 2

Spring 2008
Vol. 2 Issue 1

November 2007
Vol. 1 Issue 1

 
News from Your Pediatricians   

Spring 2009

Vol. 3 Issue 1

Medicine Changes and News

Does Your Child Really Need Vitamins?

Federal Court Finds That Vaccines Did Not Cause Autism

Pediatric News

Your Child’s Vision

Couch Potatoes Have Trouble Eating Healthy Later

Toddler Gestures

Seasonal and Age Specific

Playing it Safe: How to Avoid Injuries

Food Safety at Home

Diabetes

What's New at UVP

The Payson Office Has Moved to a New Building

 

Contacts

Kevin Moffitt
Administrator
801-373-8930

Katie Jenkins
HR Manager
801-373-8930

 

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Is Your Child Sick?

 

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Does Your Child Really Need Vitamins?

VitaminsYou want your child to be as healthy as possible. You make sure your child gets enough rest, has a proper diet, and, of course, takes that vitamin every morning with breakfast. But does your child really need a vitamin?

According to a new study probably not. If your children are already eating a healthy diet with a wide variety of fruits, vegetables, dairy, whole-grain, nuts, seeds, eggs, and meats, they are getting all the vitamins and minerals they need. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) typically does not recommend multi-vitamins for children over one year of age.

There is one exception; vitamin D. AAP does agree that one particular vitamin is important for all children, beginning from infancy. Most children, even those with good diets, do to not get enough vitamin D from diet alone. Vitamin D can be found in specific protein sources like egg yolks, fish, milk and fortified foods.

Recommended Vitamin D Doses According to Natural Standard:
-Birth to One Year: 5 micrograms per day (200 IU), not to exceed 25 micrograms (1,000 IU) per day.
-One Year to 18 Years: 5 micrograms per day (200 IU), not to exceed 50 micrograms (2,000 IU) per day.

If your children do not need a multivitamin, it is recommended that they not take it. Too much of a good thing can be bad. Excessive amounts of vitamins build in the body and can cause illness rather than prevent it. Check with your doctor before giving vitamins to your healthy child.

For more information:
Most Kids Who Take Vitamins Don't Need Them

Study: Kids who need vitamins not getting them

 

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Administration | 1355 North University Avenue, Suite 220 | Provo, UT 84604 | (801) 373-8930