How Common Is Iron Deficiency Anaemia in Nigerian Pregnancies?
If you are pregnant in Nigeria and feeling more tired than usual, you are not alone. Approximately 50% of pregnant Nigerian women develop iron deficiency anaemia, making it one of the most common pregnancy complications across Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, and rural areas alike. Yet many women and even some health workers dismiss it as "normal pregnancy tiredness" — which is dangerous.
Iron deficiency anaemia in pregnancy is not just fatigue. It is a serious condition where your blood does not carry enough oxygen to meet the demands of your body and your growing baby. Without treatment, it can lead to premature labour, low birth weight, stillbirth, and life-threatening bleeding during delivery.
The good news: iron deficiency anaemia is entirely preventable and treatable. Free or low-cost iron supplements are available at every government health centre in Nigeria. This guide explains what you need to know, what symptoms to watch for, and how to protect both yourself and your baby.
Symptoms Nigerian Women Often Ignore
Pregnancy naturally brings fatigue and breathlessness as your heart works harder and blood volume increases. But anaemia pushes these symptoms to an extreme level. If you experience any of the following, especially multiple signs at once, ask for an iron test at your next ANC (antenatal care) visit:
- Extreme fatigue — so tired you can barely get out of bed, even after resting. This goes beyond normal pregnancy tiredness.
- Panting on stairs or slight exertion — struggling to breathe after climbing just one flight of stairs or walking short distances
- Pale gums and pale inner eyelid — look in the mirror and pull down your lower eyelid. Normal healthy tissue should be pink; if it looks pale, you may be anaemic
- Dizziness or lightheadedness — especially when standing up quickly or during hot weather
- Headaches — frequent or throbbing headaches that do not go away with paracetamol
- Difficulty concentrating — struggling to focus at work or to follow conversations
- Rapid or irregular heartbeat — feeling your heart racing or pounding, even at rest
- Swollen hands or feet — beyond the normal swelling of pregnancy
⚠️ Do not ignore these signs: Many Nigerian women are told "that is just pregnancy" and sent home. If multiple symptoms are present, insist on a simple blood test. It takes 5 minutes and costs nothing at government health centres.
Why Pregnancy Depletes Iron Faster in Nigeria
During pregnancy, your body's iron demand almost doubles — from 18 mg per day to 27 mg per day. Your blood volume increases by 50%, and your baby needs iron to build their own blood and organs. Most Nigerian women start pregnancy already low in iron, making deficiency almost inevitable without supplementation.
Diet and Nutrition Gaps
The average Nigerian diet, while rich in some nutrients, makes iron absorption difficult. A cassava-heavy diet (cassava, gari, fufu) is filling but iron-poor. Many pregnant women rely heavily on these starches, especially when money is tight. Meanwhile, iron-rich foods like liver, red meat, and leafy greens are expensive or not eaten regularly.
Malaria
In Nigeria's malaria-endemic regions, even treated malaria can cause blood loss and reduce iron absorption. Pregnant women are especially vulnerable to severe malaria, which worsens anaemia dramatically.
Frequent Pregnancies
Women with short intervals between pregnancies (less than 2 years apart) do not have time to rebuild iron stores after delivery. Each pregnancy depletes iron; without adequate time to recover, deficiency deepens.
Limited Access to Iron Supplementation
While iron tablets are available free at government health centres, many women do not attend regular ANC visits due to distance, cost of transport, work demands, or poor counselling about the importance of iron. Others start supplements but stop due to side effects (nausea, constipation) that are not explained or managed.
Standard Iron Treatment: Ferrous Sulphate Dosing
Iron deficiency anaemia in pregnancy is treated with iron supplements, almost always ferrous sulphate. This is the form available at government health centres across Nigeria and is inexpensive.
Recommended Dosing
- Prevention dose (all pregnant women): Ferrous sulphate 200 mg once daily (containing 60 mg elemental iron) from week 12 onwards
- Treatment dose (if anaemic): Ferrous sulphate 200–325 mg twice daily (containing 120 mg elemental iron) until haemoglobin normalizes
- When to start: Ideally at your first ANC visit or as soon as anaemia is detected
- Duration: For the rest of pregnancy and at least 3 months after delivery to rebuild iron stores
How to Take Iron Safely and Effectively
- Take with food if nauseous, but not with tea or coffee. Iron absorption is reduced by tannins in tea, zobo drinks, and caffeine. If you take it with food to reduce nausea, choose non-dairy, non-tea options like orange juice.
- Avoid taking it with milk, calcium supplements, or antacids. These reduce iron absorption by up to 50%.
- Take vitamin C with it. Orange juice, lime, or tomato dramatically improves iron absorption. This is why drinking fresh orange juice with your iron tablet is a smart Nigerian health practice.
- Be consistent. Missing doses reduces benefit. Set a phone reminder or take it at the same time daily (e.g., after breakfast).
- Expect side effects, but do not stop. Nausea, constipation, and dark stools are common. Constipation is particularly common — drink plenty of water and eat fruits and vegetables. After 1–2 weeks, most women adjust.
- If side effects are severe, tell your doctor. They can adjust the dose or switch to a different iron form (ferrous gluconate is often gentler).
Nigerian Foods That Boost Iron Absorption in Pregnancy
While supplements are necessary, iron-rich Nigerian foods alongside them accelerate recovery:
Iron-Rich Foods
- Liver — beef or chicken liver (3 times per week is ideal)
- Ugu leaves (pumpkin leaves) — iron + vitamin C combination
- Ofada rice — more iron than white rice
- Leafy greens: spinach, amaranth, kontomire
- Beans: black-eyed peas, kidney beans (soaked to reduce antinutrients)
- Fish: mackerel, sardines
- Eggs — especially the yolk
Foods That Block Iron Absorption
- Tea and coffee — tannins bind iron
- Zobo drinks (hibiscus) — high in tannins
- Whole grains and oats — phytates reduce absorption
- Dairy products — calcium competes with iron
- Cola nuts and kola nuts — tannins present
- Sesame seeds — oxalates interfere
Practical example: If you take your iron tablet at breakfast with orange juice and eat liver with ugu leaves, you are maximizing iron absorption. If you follow it with tea an hour later, you cancel out the benefit.
When to Seek Urgent Care
Most anaemia is managed safely at your ANC clinic with iron supplements. However, seek immediate medical attention if you experience:
- Severe shortness of breath at rest or severe chest pain
- Fainting or loss of consciousness
- Severe dizziness that prevents you from standing or walking
- Heavy vaginal bleeding (soaking through more than 1 pad per hour)
- Persistent vomiting that prevents you from keeping iron tablets down
- No improvement in fatigue after 6 weeks of iron supplements (may need blood transfusion or different treatment)
Go to a hospital emergency department or your nearest Lagos/Abuja/Port Harcourt teaching hospital if these occur. If you live in a rural area without a hospital, send someone to alert the nearest health centre immediately.
How AFYA Helps You Track Prenatal Supplements
Consistency is the key to treating iron deficiency anaemia. AFYA's health app helps pregnant women stay on track with their iron supplements through:
- Daily reminder notifications — never forget your iron tablet again
- Symptom tracking — log your fatigue, shortness of breath, and other symptoms to see improvement over weeks
- Supplement logging — record each dose taken to build confidence and accountability
- ANC visit notes — store your haemoglobin results and dosing instructions in one safe place
- 24/7 AI health chat — ask questions about side effects, diet, or symptoms anytime — no wait at the clinic
Beyond iron supplements, AFYA tracks all your prenatal care — blood pressure checks, glucose tests, protein in urine, and medication compliance — so you and your healthcare provider have a complete picture of your pregnancy health.
Key Takeaways
- 50% of Nigerian pregnant women develop iron deficiency anaemia — it is extremely common and preventable
- Do not dismiss extreme fatigue, shortness of breath, and pale gums as "normal pregnancy." Request a blood test at your ANC visit.
- Standard treatment is ferrous sulphate 200–325 mg daily; it is cheap and available free at government health centres
- Take iron with orange juice (vitamin C improves absorption) and avoid tea, coffee, and milk at the same time
- Iron-rich Nigerian foods — liver, ugu, ofada rice — combined with supplements accelerate recovery
- If you experience severe shortness of breath, fainting, or heavy bleeding, seek emergency care immediately
- Consistent supplement use throughout pregnancy and 3 months after delivery protects you and your baby
💡 AFYA tip: Iron deficiency in pregnancy is one of the easiest pregnancy complications to prevent when you catch it early. Regular ANC visits (monthly until month 6, then every 2 weeks) ensure your iron levels are checked. AFYA's app helps you remember your ANC dates, track your symptoms, and stay on top of your supplements. Join the waitlist today and take control of your pregnancy health.
Stay healthy throughout your pregnancy with AFYA
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Start tracking free with AFYA →⚕️ Medical disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Iron deficiency anaemia in pregnancy must be diagnosed and managed by a qualified healthcare professional. Always attend your ANC visits, follow your doctor's dosing instructions, and report all symptoms immediately. AFYA is not a medical device and does not provide medical diagnosis or treatment. If you are pregnant and suspect you have anaemia, consult with a doctor, nurse, or midwife at your nearest health centre immediately.