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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)

Variation in Hemoglobin Across the Life Cycle and Between Males and Females
Journal Article published by Ann N Y Acad Sci in
This narrative review of the literature identified recent studies reporting hemoglobin cutoffs in males and females in various life stages, to inform the development of normal reference ranges for hemoglobin.
Methods and Analyzers for Hemoglobin Measurement in Clinical Laboratories and Field Settings
Journal Article published by Ann N Y Acad Sci in
This comprehensive narrative review describes and compares methods and analyzers used to measure hemoglobin in clinical laboratories and field settings, and the factors that influencing the measurement of hemoglobin.
Hemoglobin Concentration and Anemia Diagnosis in Venous and Capillary Blood: Biological Basis and Policy Implications
Systematic Review published by Ann N Y Acad Sci in
The narrative review systematically reviews sources of hemoglobin variability and the potential biological basis for differences in hemoglobin concentration between venous and capillary blood samples.
Reexamination of Hemoglobin Adjustments to Define Anemia: Altitude and Smoking
Journal Article published by Ann N Y Acad Sci in
This paper reexamines the associations between hemoglobin and altitude and/or smoking using 13 population-based surveys and 1 cohort study each conducted after 2000, to verify the recommended adjustments to hemoglobin concentration for altitude and/or smoking.
The Increase in Hemoglobin Concentration with Altitude Varies Among Human Populations
Journal Article published by Ann N Y Acad Sci in
This paper uses published data of residents living at different altitudes to examine there are differences in the reference values for hemoglobin among different regions of the world and among ethnic groups within a region.
Ethical and Human Rights Considerations Related to Access to Anemia Diagnosis
Journal Article published by Ann N Y Acad Sci in
Important disparities exist in anemia diagnosis globally. This paper examine individuals' and populations' access to anemia diagnosis, the accuracy of diagnostic tests, and the interpretation of test results through the lens of key ethical considerations that include the human right to health and the Rawlsian concept of the social…
Exploring Associations Between Water, Sanitation, and Anemia Through 47 Nationally Representative Demographic and Health Surveys
Journal Article published by Ann N Y Acad Sci in
This secondary data analysis from 47 Demographic and Health Surveys explores potential associations between unimproved water and sanitation and anemia in women and children.
Data Needed to Respond Appropriately to Anemia When It Is a Public Health Problem
Journal Article published by Ann N Y Acad Sci in
This narrative review describe the importance of measuring iron and other etiologic indicators to better understand the proportion of anemia that is responsive to interventions, taking into consideration the measurement of indicators of inflammation to interpret iron biomarkers, and assessing nonmodifiable genetic blood disorders associated with…