Vitamin and Mineral Status of Women of Childbearing Potential

Abstract
Increasing data suggest a role for micronutrients in pregnancy outcome, and in some cases nutritional status must be adequate in the first weeks of pregnancy. We examined nationally representative survey data on women of childbearing age: the NHANES II data for serum measures of iron status and the CSFII four-day data for dietary measures of intake of protein, iron, zinc, folic acid, and vitamins A, C, and B6. For those nutrients, women below or near poverty had consistently lower levels, with median intakes below the RDA for all but protein (e.g., folic acid, 150 micrograms in contrast with the RDA of 180 for nonpregnant and 400 for pregnant women; for B6, 0.96 mg instead of 1.6 or 2.2). Even among women with incomes as high as three times the poverty level or more, large segments of the population had very low intakes. For example, the 25th percentile in that group was only 142 micrograms/day of folic acid, 4.6 alpha-tocopherol equivalents of vitamin E, 6.7 mg zinc, and 433 mg of calcium. Approximately 15% of women had low transferrin saturation.