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Anemia remains a critical global public health concern and practical approaches to assessing anemia and its key determinants are required in both clinical and public health settings. To achieve global goals for anemia reduction, greater reliability, precision, and consistency of anemia assessment approaches are needed. Standardized approaches to assess anemia and its causes are essential to reliably assess progress on global goals for anemia reduction. The “Anemia Assessment” section provides a brief review of how to assess anemia based on hemoglobin concentrations cutoffs that correspond to age, sex, and physiologic status. The “Causes of Anemia” section discussed how to assess the likely causes of anemia in different settings.

The causes of anemia are broadly classified as non-nutritional (e.g., due to infection, inflammation, blood loss, or genetic disorders) or nutrition-specific (e.g., due to deficiencies in iron, vitamin A, riboflavin, vitamin B12, or folate). The section on “Using Survey Data for Program Decision Making” introduces a framework for assessing anemia in populations based on the “ecology of anemia”, which recognizes its many overlapping causes. We present a decision tree to inform the anemia-related data that researchers may need to collect in population-based surveys and a supporting table with information on how to collect them. We also describe an approach to interpret anemia risk factor data from population-based surveys that can inform decisions about context-specific interventions.

The USAID Advancing Nutrition Anemia Task force has developed five Anemia Briefs that explore current evidence and practice to understand and address the causes and consequences of anemia, and interventions to reduce the burden of disease. One of those briefs—"Anemia Assessment in Clinical and Public Health Settings”—explore issues related to the assessment of anemia.

We found 99 resource(s)

Anemia, Micronutrient Deficiencies, Malaria, Hemoglobinopathies and Malnutrition in Young Children and Non-Pregnant Women in Ghana: Findings from a National Survey
Journal Article published by PLOS One in
This paper describes the national prevalence of micronutrient deficiencies, anemia, malaria, inflammation, α-thalassemia, sickle cell disease and trait, and undernutrition and overweight/obesity in Ghana.
Comparing Hemoglobin Distributions Between Population-Based Surveys Matched by Country and Time
Journal Article published by BMC Public Health in
This study compares hemoglobin distributions from four pairs of nationally representative surveys measuring hemoglobin, matched by country and time from the Demographic and Health Survey Program and the Biomarkers Reflecting Inflammation and Nutritional Determinants of Anemia project.
Predictors of Anaemia Among Adolescent Schoolchildren of Ghana
Journal Article published by J Nutr Sci in
This study identifies factors associated with hemoglobin concentration and anaemia among school-attending adolescent girls and boys from 115 schools across the various regions of Ghana.
Age, Ethnicity, Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency, Micronutrient Powder Intake, and Biomarkers of Micronutrient Status, Infection, and Inflammation are Associated with Anemia Among Children 6–59 Months in Nepal
Journal Article published by Journal of Nutrition in
This study used cross-sectional data from the 2016 Nepal National Micronutrient Status Survey to evaluate factors associated with anemia in a nationally representative, population-based sample of children 6–59 months.
The Co-Occurrence of Overweight and Micronutrient Deficiencies or Anemia Among Women of Reproductive Age In Malawi
Journal Article published by Journal of Nutrition in
Using data from nonpregnant women aged 15–49 years in the 2015–2016 Malawi Micronutrient Survey, this paper described the prevalence of double burden pf malnutrition (overweight and obesity, and anemia) among Malawian women
The Role of Modelling to Inform Context-Specific Anaemia Programming
Journal Article published by Lancet Glob Health in
Using the example of a microsimulation study to estimate net benefits and cost-effectiveness of micronutrient powder programmes for young children, this paper proposes the use of modeling tools to evaluate benefits, risks, and costs of interventions, often in the absence of comprehensive information about all three.
WHO Guideline on Use of Ferritin Concentrations to Assess Iron Status in Individuals and Populations
Guideline/Guidance published by World Health Organization in
This guideline provides global, evidence-informed recommendations on the use of indicators for assessing a population’s iron status and application of the use of ferritin concentrations for monitoring and evaluating iron interventions.
Review of the Evidence Regarding the Use of Antenatal Multiple Micronutrient Supplementation in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
Literature Review published by Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences in
This review presents the conclusions of a task force that set out to assess the prevalence of inadequate micronutrient intakes and adverse birth outcomes in low- and middle-income countries; the data from trials comparing multiple-micronutrient supplements that contain iron–folic acid with iron–folic acid supplements alone; the risks of reaching…