Sanghvi Tina G, Harvey Philip W J, Wainwright Emily
Academy for Educational Development, Washington DC, USA.
Food Nutr Bull. 2010 Jun;31(2 Suppl):S100-7. doi: 10.1177/15648265100312S202.
According to a World Health Organization (WHO) review of nationally representative surveys from 1993 to 2005, 42% of pregnant women have anemia worldwide. Almost 90% of anemic women reside in Africa or Asia. Most countries have policies and programs for prenatal iron-folic acid supplementation, but coverage remains low and little emphasis is placed on this intervention within efforts to strengthen antenatal care services. The evidence of the public health impact of iron-folic acid supplementation and documentation of the potential for scaling up have not been reviewed recently.
The purpose of this review is to examine the evidence regarding the impact on maternal mortality of iron-folic acid supplementation and the evidence for the effectiveness of this intervention in supplementation trials and large-scale programs.
The impact on mortality is reviewed from observational studies that were analyzed for the Global Burden of Disease Analysis in 2004. Reviews of iron-folic acid supplementation trials were analyzed by other researchers and are summarized. Data on anemia reduction from two large-scale national programs are presented, and factors responsible for high coverage with iron-folic acid supplementation are discussed.
Iron-deficiency anemia underlies 115,000 maternal deaths per year. In Asia, anemia is the second highest cause of maternal mortality. Even mild and moderate anemia increase the risk of death in pregnant women. Iron-folic acid supplementation of pregnant women increases hemoglobin by 1.17 g/dL in developed countries and 1.13 g/dL in developing countries. The prevalence of maternal anemia can be reduced by one-third to one-half over a decade if action is taken to launch focused, large-scale programs that are based on lessons learned from countries with successful programs, such as Thailand and Nicaragua.
Iron-folic acid supplementation is an under-resourced, affordable intervention with substantial potential for contributing to Millennium Development Goal 5 (maternal mortality reduction) in countries where iron intakes among pregnant women are low and anemia prevalence is high. This can be achieved in the near term, as policies are already in place in most countries and iron-folic acid supplements are already in lists of essential drugs. What is needed is to systematically adopt lessons about how to strengthen demand and supply systems from successful programs.
根据世界卫生组织(WHO)对1993年至2005年具有全国代表性调查的回顾,全球42%的孕妇患有贫血症。近90%的贫血妇女居住在非洲或亚洲。大多数国家都有产前补充铁叶酸的政策和项目,但覆盖率仍然很低,而且在加强产前护理服务的努力中,对这种干预措施的重视程度也很低。最近尚未对补充铁叶酸对公共卫生的影响以及扩大规模的潜力的相关证据进行审查。
本综述的目的是研究补充铁叶酸对孕产妇死亡率影响的证据,以及该干预措施在补充试验和大规模项目中的有效性证据。
从2004年全球疾病负担分析中分析的观察性研究中回顾对死亡率的影响。其他研究人员对铁叶酸补充试验的综述进行了分析并总结。列出了两个大规模国家项目中贫血减少的数据,并讨论了铁叶酸补充高覆盖率的相关因素。
缺铁性贫血是每年115,000例孕产妇死亡的原因。在亚洲,贫血是孕产妇死亡的第二大原因。即使是轻度和中度贫血也会增加孕妇死亡的风险。在发达国家,孕妇补充铁叶酸可使血红蛋白增加1.17 g/dL,在发展中国家增加1.13 g/dL。如果采取行动开展有针对性的大规模项目,借鉴泰国和尼加拉瓜等成功实施项目国家的经验教训,孕产妇贫血患病率在十年内可降低三分之一至二分之一。
在孕妇铁摄入量低且贫血患病率高的国家,补充铁叶酸是一种资源不足但负担得起的干预措施,对实现千年发展目标5(降低孕产妇死亡率)具有巨大潜力。这可以在短期内实现,因为大多数国家已经制定了相关政策,铁叶酸补充剂也已列入基本药物清单。需要做的是系统地借鉴成功项目中关于如何加强需求和供应系统的经验教训。