Iron Deficiency and Cognitive Achievement Among School-Aged Children and
Adolescents in the United States
PEDIATRICS Vol. 107 No. 6 June 2001, pp. 1381-1386
Jill S. Halterman, Jeffrey M. Kaczorowski, C. Andrew Aligne, Peggy Auinger,
and Peter G. Szilagyi
Context: Iron deficiency anemia in infants can cause developmental
problems. However, the relationship between iron status and cognitive
achievement in older children is less clear.
Objective: To investigate the relationship between iron deficiency and
cognitive test scores among a nationally representative sample of school-aged
children and adolescents.
Design: The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III
1988-1994 provides cross-sectional data for children 6 to 16 years old
and contains measures of iron status including transferrin saturation, free
erythrocyte protoporphyrin, and serum ferritin. Children were considered
iron-deficient if any 2 of these values were abnormal for age and gender,
and standard hemoglobin values were used to detect anemia. Scores from
standardized tests were compared for children with normal iron status, iron
deficiency without anemia, and iron deficiency with anemia. Logistic regression
was used to estimate the association of iron status and below average test
scores, controlling for confounding factors.
Results: Among the 5398 children in the sample, 3% were
iron-deficient. The prevalence of iron deficiency was highest among adolescent
girls (8.7%). Average math scores were lower for children with iron deficiency
with and without anemia, compared with children with normal iron status
(86.4 and 87.4 vs 93.7). By logistic regression, children with iron
deficiency had greater than twice the risk of scoring below average in math than
did children with normal iron status (odds ratio: 2.3; 95% confidence interval:
1.1-4.4). This elevated risk was present even for iron-deficient children
without anemia (odds ratio: 2.4; 95% confidence interval: 1.1-5.2).
Conclusions: We demonstrated lower standardized math scores among
iron-deficient school-aged children and adolescents, including those with iron
deficiency without anemia. Screening for iron deficiency without anemia may be
warranted for children at risk. Key words: iron deficiency, anemia,
cognition, math, children, adolescence.
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