Honestly, OTC quantities vary depending on what is legal where you live. It has been 8-9 years since I lived in the US but nevertheless: At the time, you could buy 1000-2000iu strengths. I worked at a large pharmacy chain and stocked vitamins weekly.
Then I moved to Norway. One strength is sold in most stores - 400iu per tablet. You might be able to buy stronger in the pharmacy, but I had to have a prescription for a higher strength when I had low levels.
And to be fair, 2 of those store tablets keeps my levels high enough. So while 400 might be inadequate, 800 certainly isn't. Even without enough sunlight: I literally cannot get enough during the winter because the sun simply isn't strong enough when it happens to be up.
Is it possible they sell a lower strength because the nordic diet tends to include a lot of seafood which has vitamin D? Or is it just a legal thing about selling weaker supplements?
I don't know the answer to this. If I were to guess, though, it is more about selling reasonable strengths to folks self-treating. First, supplements are generally recommended to everyone living here as part of being healthy, and truly stressed for immigrants. Even eating fish just isn't always enough, especially if you do not have the very fair skin that is common here. Second.. well, melatonin was prescription when I moved here.
It would depend on individual ability to metabolize D3 and amount of outdoors sunlight and the extent that local food is fortified with D3. So everyone's situation is unique.
I'm confident that 2,000 IU daily is safe, though.
It would depend on individual ability to metabolize D3 and amount of outdoors sunlight and the extent that local food is fortified with D3
The issue is that I fairly far north. You can miss the entirety of daylight in December if you work first shift at a factory (there will be a glow of twilight as you go home). The sunlight we do get in the winter is of poor quality. I'm not even above the arctic circle - it gets worse up there with no direct sunlight. I'm not sure of the extent of food being fortified: I can't see where they've added it to the milk (for example). I could be wrong about this last bit.
There is a lot of fish in the diet, but nonetheless, they recommend the general population take some vitamin D in the wintertime.
Then I moved to Norway. One strength is sold in most stores - 400iu per tablet. You might be able to buy stronger in the pharmacy, but I had to have a prescription for a higher strength when I had low levels.
And to be fair, 2 of those store tablets keeps my levels high enough. So while 400 might be inadequate, 800 certainly isn't. Even without enough sunlight: I literally cannot get enough during the winter because the sun simply isn't strong enough when it happens to be up.