National, regional, and global estimates of anaemia by severity in women and children for 2000–19: a pooled analysis of population-representative data
Film Independent · Imperial College London · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Anaemia causes health and economic harms. The prevalence of anaemia in women aged 15-49 years, by pregnancy status, is indicator 2.2.3 of the UN Sustainable Development Goals, and the aim of halving the anaemia prevalence in women of reproductive age by 2030 is an extension of the 2025 global nutrition targets endorsed by the World Health Assembly (WHA). We aimed to estimate the prevalence of anaemia by severity for children aged 6-59 months, non-pregnant women aged 15-49 years, and pregnant women aged 15-49 years in 197 countries and territories and globally for the period 2000-19.
For this pooled analysis of population-representative data, we collated 489 data sources on haemoglobin distribution in children and women from 133 countries, including 4·5 million haemoglobin measurements. Our data sources comprised health examination, nutrition, and household surveys, accessed as anonymised individual records or as summary statistics such as mean haemoglobin and anaemia prevalence. We used a Bayesian hierarchical mixture model to estimate haemoglobin distributions in each population and country-year. This model allowed for coherent estimation of mean haemoglobin and prevalence of anaemia by severity.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 67.78
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 32
Authors
11Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Demography
- Population
- Anemia
- Estimation
- Global health
- Pregnancy
- Pediatrics
Funding
- USUnited States Agency for International DevelopmentAwards: GHA-G-00-09-00003, 720-OAA-18C-00083
- BABill and Melinda Gates Foundation
- WBWorld Bank Group
- WHWorld Health Organization
- UUNICEF
- CFCenters for Disease Control and PreventionAward: 1 NE11GH000001-01-00
- MRMedical Research CouncilAward: MR/V034057/1
- CPCarolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill