GiveWell Conversations

Scrutinizing One of Our Longest-Funded Programs: April 2, 2026

Apr 2, 2026
Stephan Guyenet, senior researcher with a background in biochemistry and neuroscience, helps untangle the evidence around vitamin A supplementation. They discuss why old randomized trials showed big mortality reductions. They cover challenges applying those findings today, novel analyses on dosing and disease-specific effects, and how updated estimates shaped GiveWell’s funding decisions.
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INSIGHT

Vitamin A Has Strong Randomized Evidence For Mortality

  • Vitamin A supplementation has unusually strong mortality evidence from 11 large RCTs averaging a 19% reduction in under-5 mortality.
  • GiveWell's custom meta-analysis pooled those trials specifically designed to measure mortality, making the evidence base unusually robust compared with most global health interventions.
INSIGHT

Old Trials May Not Reflect Today's Disease Landscape

  • External validity is the biggest concern: most mortality trials date from the 1980s–1990s, while infectious disease burden and vitamin A deficiency have declined since then.
  • The large DEVTA trial (1999–2004 India) found only a 4% non-significant mortality reduction, raising questions about applicability to modern contexts.
INSIGHT

Publication Bias Concern Addressed By Focusing On Large Trials

  • Publication bias was raised by external researchers and could halve the apparent effect, but GiveWell investigated by focusing on large mortality trials.
  • Interviews with trialists (Keith West, Reynaldo Martorell) found no unpublished large mortality trials, reducing concern about bias among the big studies.
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