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DRBecause you asked: Many women are told to “take calcium to protect bones after menopause.” But the science doesn’t support that blanket advice — and moreover, calcium supplements can do more harm than good.
Here’s what the evidence shows:
No benefit: Calcium supplements don’t reliably reduce osteoporotic fracture risk in healthy postmenopausal women, even though they may slow bone mineral density loss.
Risk: Multiple analyses (including a large one of the Women’s Health Initiative population) suggest taking supplemental calcium may increase cardiovascular (heart attack) risk by ~15% in postmenopausal women compared to getting calcium from food.
Some large trials have also linked supplemental calcium with higher risk of kidney stones and plaque buildup in arteries, especially when taken in higher amounts. (I’ve had kidney stones- MUCH worse than labor!)
In contrast, dietary calcium does not show these risks — probably because food delivers calcium more slowly and with co-nutrients that help regulate its use, according to the
Bone Health & Osteoporosis Foundation.
Bottom line: Calcium is essential, but supplements are not inherently “safe” because they’re labeled as vitamins. More isn’t always better — especially when it comes to pills instead of plates.
What’s a bone-healthy strategy that doesn’t rely on supplements? The goal is to get 1200 mg/day of calcium from real food sources.
3 calcium-rich foods to emphasize:
Plain Greek yogurt (1 cup): ~300 mg calcium + protein for bone matrix
Cooked collard greens (½ cup): ~100–130 mg calcium + magnesium
Almonds (¼ cup): ~95 mg calcium & healthy fats that support bone cell health
Pair these with vitamin D3 (sunlight or food sources like salmon/egg yolks) & weight-bearing exercises (please lift weights!) — the combo your skeleton actually responds to.
If you do need a supplement (for example, if your diet is low or you have documented deficiency), talk to your clinician about the lowest effective dose and whether to take it with vitamin D3 and Vitamin K2 to improve absorption without a big spike.
Bone health isn’t about a single pill. It’s about a long game of thoughtful nutrition + movement — especially after 50
@drjashton










