Supplements in the News
| Folate Supplementation Is Still Inadequate Among Women |
| Published Wednesday, August 1, 2007 |
AUSTIN,
Texas - A majority of women are still not supplementing with folic
acid, despite encouragement from federal agencies to do so, with
greater numbers of obese and non-white women failing to fight neural
tube defects with the B vitamin. Up to 70 percent of neural tube
defects of the brain and spinal cord can be prevented by consumption of
folic acid by women before and early during pregnancy. A new study from
the Texas Department of State Health Services compared folic acid
supplementation rates among obese, overweight and normal-weight women
(J Obstet Gynecol Neonatal Nurs. 2007 Jul-Aug; 36(4)335-41). Among
6,835 study participants, 35 percent reported daily folic acid
supplementation. Obese women were less likely to supplement, even after
adjustment for other factors. Similar findings were recently reported
by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which analyzed
nutrient intake data reported by 1,685 non-pregnant women aged 15 to 49
years who participated in the 2001-2002 National Health and Nutritional
Examination Survey (Am J Clin Nutr. 2007 May; 85(5):1409-16). Only 8
percent of non-pregnant women reported consuming at least 400 mcg/d of
folic acid from fortified foods; among non-Hispanic black women, the
percentage fell to 5 percent, compared to 6.8 percent of Hispanic women
and 8.9 percent of non-Hispanic white women. A smaller percentage of
non-Hispanic black (19.1 percent) and Hispanic (21 percent) women than
non-Hispanic white women (40.5 percent) consumed at least 400 mcg/d
folic acid from fortified foods, supplements or both, in addition to
food folate.
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