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The prevalence of rickets among non-Caucasian children
  1. S Ashraf,
  2. M Z Mughal
  1. Department of Paediatric Medicine, Saint Mary’s Hospital for Women & Children, Hathersage Road, Manchester M13 0JH, UK; zulf.mughal@man.ac.uk

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We welcome the timely review by Shaw and Pal1 on the continuing problem of vitamin D deficiency among South East Asians living in the UK. Since our report in 1999,2 we have continued to see 8–10 non-white toddlers with florid vitamin D deficiency rickets per year, at our inner city general paediatric unit. A recent national survey showed that 20–34% of South East Asian children had biochemical evidence of vitamin D deficiency.3 However, there is no information on the prevalence of clinical rickets among non-Caucasian children in the UK.

We opportunistically studied 6–36 month old children from ethnic minority backgrounds who were brought to a child health clinic in Central Manchester between 30 May 2001 and 12 July 200 for immunisations, weight checks, hearing tests, …

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