Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Latest MythCrusher video tackles iron deficiency

Iron deficiency anemia is the most common nutrition deficiency in the United States and, but not all iron-rich foods are equally beneficial, according to a new Meat MythCrusher video produced by the North American Meat Institute. 

The amount of total iron in meat versus vegetable sources often appears be similar, but in the video, Lindsay Chichester, extension educator at the University of Nebraska, explains the difference between heme iron found in meat and non-heme iron from vegetable sources.

“Our bodies can more easily absorb the iron in the heme form from meat than from vegetables in the non-heme form,” she said.

“For vegetarians, you need to eat 1.8 times the amount of non-heme iron to get the amount from one serving of meat.”

Chichester says that eating meat with vegetables helps increase the absorption of iron from both sources.


The video also discusses the importance of iron for a variety of populations including young children, pregnant women and older adults as well as the health consequences of iron deficiency.