Thuringians are calling the poison emergency number more and more often – you don’t know why – Thueringen24

Apparently, the Thuringians pick up the phone more often to call the poison control center.

As the poison information center in Erfurt says, there is one reason why the Thuringians are calling more and more.

Thuringia: This ensures more poison emergency calls

Specifically, it is regarding vitamin D. It is considered a sun hormone and is important for the immune system. The problem: There are many drugs on the market, some of which are highly dosed – and that is exactly what is currently driving up the number of calls in Thuringia.

There have already been 162 such cases this year, 31 more than in 2021, said the head of the poison information center in Erfurt, Dagmar Prasa, of the German Press Agency. Vitamin D has moved up to 17th place from 69th place last year in the ranking of the drugs most frequently referred to in the calls.

This may be related to Corona and the belief that vitamin D protects better once morest infections, said Prasa. There are some very high-dose preparations on the market – also as dietary supplements. “If you make a mistake with the dosage and take a milliliter instead of a drop, you already have a clear overdose,” said Prasa.

Thuringian poison emergency call: “This is becoming a problem”

A single overdose of vitamin D is relatively harmless. “It becomes a problem if you do it every day,” said the pharmacist. A chronic overdose causes the calcium level in the blood to rise and this has other consequences. This can lead to cardiac arrhythmia and kidney damage. According to Prasa, most of the inquiries concerned a one-time, accidental overdose or that children had served themselves.


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The human body forms vitamin D itself under the influence of sunlight. That is why it is also known as the sun hormone. Vitamin D contributes to bone stability and is important for the immune system. It can protect once morest acute respiratory infections.

The poison information center in Erfurt is operated jointly by the federal states of Thuringia, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. (dpa)

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