PRIMARY AND SECONDARY PREVENTION OF IRON DEFICIENCY AT THE PRESENT STAGE

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Western European Studies

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The problem of iron deficiency is primarily a nutritional problem, so the primary prevention of iron deficiency is an adequate, balanced nutrition of a person at any age. The daily iron requirement for an adult is about 1-2 mg, for a child - 0.5-1.2 mg. A normal diet provides an intake of 5 to 15 mg of elemental iron per day. Only 10-15% of dietary iron is absorbed in the GI tract (duodenum and upper jejunum) [3,4].

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