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Skin color may affect vitamin D production
The color of your skin is determined by a pigment called melanin.

People with darker skin typically have more melanin than people with lighter skin. What’s more, their melanin pigments are also larger and darker.

Melanin helps protect the skin against damage from excess sunlight. It acts as a natural sunscreen and absorbs the sun’s UV rays to defend against sunburn and skin cancers.

However, that creates a big dilemma because darker-skinned people need to spend longer in the sun than lighter-skinned people to produce the same amount of vitamin D. This is a major reason why darker-skinned people have a higher risk of deficiency.

For that reason, if you have dark skin, you may need to spend a bit more time in the sun to get your daily dose of vitamin D.
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BlackPillBot on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
I take my shirt off, and roll my shorts up and play with my dogs in the backyard 15-30 minutes at least three times a week. I also cut my backyard like this with a push mower. If I go more than two days without doing this, I definitely feel different in a bad way. It’s definitely not mound over matter either.
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