First Nationwide Folic Acid Survey
of Spanish Speaking Women Finds Most Are Missing Benefits, March Of Dimes Says.
WHITE PLAINS,
N.Y., JAN. 5, 2009
Only 17 percent of Spanish-speaking women of childbearing age in the United States
are taking a multivitamin containing folic acid daily, according to the first-
nationally representative folic acid awareness survey to focus on this
population.
Folic acid can prevent neural tube defects (NTDs), serious birth defects of the brain and spine such as
spina bifida and anencephaly, which are more
prevalent in the Hispanic population than other racial or ethnic groups.
Hispanics are the largest and the fastest growing racial and ethnic group in
the U.S.,
according to the U.S. Census Bureau, and they account for more than 23 percent
of all births in this country.
Folic Acid Awareness Week is January 5-11, a time
when the March of Dimes and other members of the National Council on Folic Acid
are work to raise awareness of the benefits of this essential B vitamin. Daily
consumption of folic acid beginning before and continuing through pregnancy is
crucial because NTDs can occur in the early weeks
following conception, often before a woman knows she is pregnant.
Two separate surveys by the March of Dimes of womens
awareness of folic acid and its benefits are being released today. Improving
Preconception Health: Knowledge and Use of Vitamins and Folic Acid Among Spanish-language-dominant Hispanic Women was
conducted by International
Communications Research. They questioned 1,250 women of childbearing
age and was funded by the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
Improving Preconception Health: Womens Knowledge
and Use of Folic Acid, which surveyed more than 2,000 women of all races and
ethnicities, was conducted by The Gallup Organization and also was funded by
the CDC.
More than half of all pregnancies are unplanned,
which is why its so important that all women of childbearing age take a
multivitamin with at least 400 micrograms of folic acid beginning before and
continuing through pregnancy, said Joann Petrini,
PhD, MPH, director of the March of Dimes Perinatal
Data Center.
Hispanic women and young women (ages 18 to 24)
are among the least likely groups in the U.S. to take the recommended amount
of folic acid that could lower their babies risk of developing NTDs.
The March of Dimes survey of women of all races found
that nearly 40 percent of American women of childbearing age (ages 18-45), say they take a daily multivitamin supplement containing
folic acid. However, the rate drops to 27 percent among women 18 to 24 years
old. Only 11 percent of women of childbearing age said they knew that folic
acid should be consumed prior to pregnancy.
The March of Dimes has led efforts to raise awareness
of the benefits of folic acid since 1992, when the U.S. Public Health Service
began recommending that all women capable of becoming pregnant consume folic
acid beginning before pregnancy to prevent NTDs.
Also, since 2004, March of Dimes chapters have
awarded more than $1.5 million in community grants and awards to support folic
acid education, and have reached more than 4.5 million consumers and health
care professionals with folic acid education and materials.
For example, March of Dimes chapters in North Carolina and Florida
offer success stories. In North Carolina,
there was an 80 percent decline in the number of NTDs
between 1995 and 2005, and in Florida,
more than 80 percent of women of childbearing age report taking a vitamin
containing folic acid before pregnancy.
Since the U.S. Food & Drug Administration began
requiring in 1998 that all enriched grains be fortified with folic acid, NTDs in the U.S.
have declined by 26 percent.
The March of Dimes is the leading nonprofit
organization for pregnancy and baby health. Its mission is to improve the
health of babies by preventing birth defects, premature birth and infant
mortality. For the latest resources and information, visit www.marchofdimes.com or
www.nacersano.org
For detailed national, state, and
county perinatal data, visit www.marchofdimes.com/peristats
.