It is long broad professional consensus that the vegan diet is safe and healthy for both large and small. However, several Norwegian media recently with the succulent and selling, albeit without the coverage, the headlines that suggested the opposite, and women who have chosen a vegan diet was, thus, completely without coating, accused of exposing their children to severe health risks. Is it to spread such accusations, and stigmatisere belief really in line with the presseetiske rules?
Gunhild-the diet has taken totally by: – People commented that I had more energy
It began with the TV2 interviewed Norwegian, Danish and Swedish doctors. The doctors were concerned that a lack of vitamin B12 in children is more widespread than we know. B12 deficiency can occur for many different reasons, including the increased need for the vitamin during pregnancy and lactation, and because of decreased uptake in the intestine by the use of some medications.
today meets health care very rare vegans with a vitamin B12 deficiency, and the percentage of vegans are tiny among those who get proven B12 deficiency. Vegans are well lit, both by the ministry of Health, health care and Vegansamfunnet, that the supplementation of vitamin B12 is necessary if you have a vegan diet. In Denmark, the us acquaintance, registered only two cases of the governments B12 deficiency in vegans in the course of the year.
despite, made the newspaper iTromsø a juicy but totally unfounded and hard stigmatizing headline. Even worse is that the NTB picked up the headline without checking the facts, citations or whether there was coverage for the message in the title. As did many Norwegian newspapers. I’ve emailed to, and pointed out faktafeilene in both iTromsø and NTB, without getting a response, before the entire local press picked NTB-up the issue. Misinformation has spread further to the whole of the Uk, as a result of these faktafeilene.
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