Why Anemia Is Common in Pregnancy
Anemia affects 37–52 percent of pregnant women globally. Blood volume expands by approximately 40–50 percent during pregnancy, and the fetus actively draws iron from maternal stores regardless of the mother’s iron status. Symptoms include fatigue, breathlessness, pallor, poor concentration, and reduced activity tolerance. Severe maternal anemia is associated with preterm birth, low birth weight, and increased postpartum hemorrhage risk.
Heme vs Non-Heme Iron: The Critical Difference
Heme iron, found in animal products (red meat, liver, poultry, fish), is absorbed at 15–35 percent efficiency. Non-heme iron from plant sources (legumes, fortified cereals, tofu, seeds, dark leafy greens) is absorbed at only 2–20 percent. Vegetarians and vegans need to consume significantly more total iron and use absorption strategies carefully. To maximize absorption of non-heme iron: pair it with vitamin C (orange juice with lentil soup, bell pepper with spinach). Cooking in a cast iron pan adds additional iron to food.
What Blocks Iron Absorption
Polyphenols in tea and coffee reduce non-heme iron absorption by 50–90 percent when consumed within an hour of iron-rich meals. Phytates in whole grains and legumes inhibit absorption (reduced by soaking and sprouting). Calcium from dairy or supplements competes with iron when consumed at the same meal. Strategic separation: enjoy tea between meals, separate calcium supplements from iron by at least 2 hours, and soak lentils and beans before cooking.
When Food Is Not Enough: Supplementation
Most prenatal vitamins contain 27 mg of iron. If ferritin is low (below 30 mcg/L preconception) or hemoglobin is below threshold, additional supplementation is typically prescribed. Ferrous bisglycinate causes significantly fewer gastrointestinal side effects than ferrous sulfate and is comparably absorbed. Vitamin C co-supplementation (250 mg with iron) improves absorption and can reduce the dose required. IV iron is recommended when oral iron is not tolerated or when hemoglobin is critically low in the third trimester.
Key Takeaways
This article on Anemia in pregnancy: iron-rich foods and treatment planning is designed to give you clear, evidence-informed steps to discuss with your care team. Every fertility journey, pregnancy, and IVF cycle is unique — use this as a starting framework and build your individual plan with your doctor, midwife, or registered dietitian. For safety-critical decisions, current evidence and your clinical team always take precedence over general guidance.
Visual Guide

Keep this one practical: use the first image to understand the context, then apply one actionable step today before moving to the next section.

References and Further Reading
- ASRM ReproductiveFacts: Optimizing Natural Fertility - Patient education from the American Society for Reproductive Medicine on fertility timing and care discussions.
- ASRM ReproductiveFacts: Age and Fertility - Patient education on age-related fertility changes and treatment context.
- ACOG: Healthy Eating During Pregnancy - Patient guidance on pregnancy nutrients including folic acid, iron, iodine, choline, vitamin D, and omega-3 fatty acids.
- CDC: About Folic Acid - Public health guidance on folic acid before and during early pregnancy.
- ACOG: Routine Tests During Pregnancy - Patient guidance on routine pregnancy lab tests and conditions that can be found and treated.
Editorial and Medical Note
Written by MVXGRP Editorial Team. Last updated: April 20, 2026.
This article is educational and does not replace diagnosis, treatment, or personal medical advice. For symptoms, medication decisions, fertility treatment planning, pregnancy complications, or urgent concerns, speak with your doctor, midwife, fertility clinic, or emergency care team. Read more about our editorial approach.