Updated
Updated · The Globe and Mail · Jun 22
Canadian Review of 69 Trials Finds Calcium, Vitamin D Barely Cut Falls or Fractures
Updated
Updated · The Globe and Mail · Jun 22

Canadian Review of 69 Trials Finds Calcium, Vitamin D Barely Cut Falls or Fractures

3 articles · Updated · The Globe and Mail · Jun 22

Summary

  • A BMJ review of 69 randomized trials covering 153,902 adults found calcium, vitamin D, or both offered little if any protection against falls, fractures, or hip fractures in most older adults.
  • Moderate- and high-quality evidence showed similar results across age groups, vitamin D status, calcium intake, and prior fracture or fall history, undermining routine supplement use for prevention.
  • A small fracture reduction appeared when calcium and vitamin D were combined, but researchers said it was not clinically meaningful and was driven largely by higher-risk groups such as long-term-care residents.
  • The authors said the findings mainly apply to generally healthy, community-dwelling older adults; supplements may still help treat deficiency, cover dietary gaps, or support osteoporosis care.
  • An accompanying editorial urged a shift toward measures with proven benefit—balance and resistance training, home safety steps, and personalized fall-prevention programs—as 20% to 30% of adults 65 and older fall each year.

Insights

If supplements fail to prevent falls, what proven strategies can actually protect older adults?
Why is decades-old advice on calcium and vitamin D supplements for seniors now being overturned?

2026 Canadian Study Overturns Calcium and Vitamin D Supplement Guidelines for Older Adults: Focus Shifts to Exercise and Personalized Fall Prevention

Overview

A major Canadian review published in The BMJ in 2026 analyzed data from 69 randomized controlled trials with over 150,000 adults and found a significant shift in understanding bone health and fall prevention. The review showed that routine calcium and vitamin D supplementation provides little to no meaningful benefit for most community-dwelling older adults in preventing falls or fractures. The evidence is strong, especially for vitamin D and combined supplements, and moderate for calcium alone. Based on these findings, the review urges clinicians and guideline panels to re-evaluate current recommendations and focus on more effective strategies.

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