For example, her work has demonstrated that 15% of pregnant women are Vitamin D deficient; 11% of newborns are very deficient and 30% of newborns have low levels of Vitamin D. Vitamin D deficiency can contribute to immunological dysfunction. The potential impact of Vitamin D is particularly relevant given our ethnic population mix and education programmes aimed at limiting exposure to sunlight. Dr Craig has also demonstrated that Type II diabetes, once very rare in childhood, now constitutes one in 10 of every new case of diabetes diagnosed in adolescence. This is likely to be diet-related.
Current work is aimed at providing epidemiological evidence to explore causative links between putative viral infection or risk factors for this as well as vitamin D deficiency in the aetiology of childhood Type I diabetes. It is of fundamental importance that the cause of childhood diabetes is identified before a cure can be devised.
Craig ME, Howard NJ, Silink M, Rawlinson WD. Reduced frequency of HLA DRB1*03-DQB1*02 in children with Type 1 diabetes associated with enterovirus RNA. JID 2003:187;1562-70.
Craig ME, Femia, G, Broyda V, Lloyd M, Howard NJ. Type 2 diabetes in indigenous and non-indigenous children and adolescents in NSW. MJA 2007 Volume 186 Number 10. 497-99.
Craig ME, Jones TW, Silink M, Ping YJ. Diabetes care, glycemic control and complications in children with type 1 diabetes from Asia and the Western Pacific region. Journal of Diabetes and Complications 21 (2007) 280-287
Bowyer L, Catling-Paull C, Diamond T, Homer C, Davis G, Craig ME. Vitamin D parathyroid hormone and calcium levels in pregnant women and their children and their neonates.