Skip to content
  • About
  • Partner with Us
  • Join Us
  • Log In
Primary Menu
  • Latest
  • Topics
    • Energy Transition
    • Sustainable Finance
    • Sustainable Value Chain
    • All Topics
  • Regions
    • Americas
    • Africa
    • Australia & Oceania
    • Central Asia
    • East Asia
    • Europe
    • Southeast Asia
    • South Asia
    • West Asia
    • Global
  • News
  • Brief
  • Interview
  • Figure
  • Infographic
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Grassroots
  • Press Release
  • Youth
  • Corporate Sustainability
  • Brief
  • GNA Knowledge Hub

Systemic Intervention Needed to Address Anemia Among Adolescent Girls and Women

Stronger interventions are needed in the prevention and management of anemia among adolescent girls and women as a systemic health problem.
by Maharani Rachmawati and Abul Muamar March 10, 2025
puzzle pieces in red, blue, orange, and yellow stacked on top of a pink block

Photo: Freepik.

Health is the foundation of our wellbeing, which is why we should not treat any health problems lightly, including anemia. Anemia is most prevalent among adolescent girls and women, and also the root cause of high maternal mortality rates and cases of stunting among children below age five. Therefore, stronger interventions are needed in the prevention and management of anemia among adolescent girls and women as a systemic health problem.

Understanding Anemia

Anemia is a condition characterized by lower-than-normal hemoglobin levels. The World Health Organization (WHO) states that anemia in adult males occurs when the hemoglobin levels are below 13 grams/deciliter (g/dl), adult females and adolescent girls (12-14 years) below 12 g/dl, and pregnant women below 11 g/dl. Meanwhile, the clinical limit commonly used to diagnose anemia is a hemoglobin level below 10 g/dl.

Anemia is not a disease diagnosis, but rather a series of symptoms we must look out for. The most common symptoms of anemia are feeling weak, lethargic, tired, exhausted, and absentminded. It is also often accompanied by headaches, blurred vision, and drowsiness, as well as reduced concentration and productivity. In acute conditions, anemia can cause a faster heartbeat, shortness of breath, chest pain, and even organ dysfunction.

Treating anemia requires knowing what causes it.Three main factors that cause anemia are: reduced red blood cell production by the bone marrow; bleeding (due to menstruation, childbirth, digestive tract bleeding, and accidents); and blood disorders (thalassemia). In developing countries, cases occur where parasitic infections (hookworms) can cause anemia.

Anemia Among Adolescent Girls and Women

More than 2 billion people suffer from anemia, contributing to three-quarters of the 1 million deaths per year in Africa and Southeast Asia. For instance, Indonesia recorded 26.8% of children aged 5-14 years and 32% of young people aged 15-24 years suffered from anemia in 2018. In other words, three to four out of 10 teenagers suffer from anemia.

The good news is that a study revealed that global cases of anemia are declining in men. Unfortunately, anemia among adolescent girls and women remains prevalent.

The largest groups experiencing anemia are women of productive age and pregnant women. Adolescent girls are susceptible to anemia because their hemoglobin levels are naturally lower than men’s. The menstrual cycle is also a cause of the high rate of anemia in women and adolescent girls.

The impact of anemia on adolescent girls will be carried over into adulthood, especially during pregnancy. Anemia can cause pregnant women to experience bleeding before and during childbirth, which will threaten the safety of the mother and child. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), anemia causes about 800,000 emergency room visits for mothers each year and causes nearly 6,000 maternal deaths.

Moreover, babies conceived by women with anemia can experience miscarriage, premature birth, low birth weight, and growth disorders such as stunting, wasting, and neurocognitive disorders.

Inadequate Actions

The issue of anemia is not without action. Since the 1970s, WHO has recommended iron and folic acid supplementation programs and published guidelines and recommendations for controlling anemia in countries worldwide. However, progress in reducing the prevalence of anemia remains very slow.

Across the globe, national governments have launched policies, frameworks, and guidelines to address this issue. There are also various programs and initiatives by governments and civil society to tackle anemia among adolescent girls and women.

However, existing actions remain insufficient. Some common contributing factors include incomplete government planning, inadequate and uneven access to health facilities in rural areas, minimal human resources and budget, complicated supplement distribution, and a weak monitoring and control system of current programs.

Systemic Interventions in Anemia Management

Anemia is often misunderstood as ordinary fatigue and ends up dismissed as trivial. In reality, it is one of the root causes of high maternal mortality rates.

Worse, anemia is often seen as merely a personal health problem instead of a broad, systemic public health problem that cannot be addressed with a partial approach. In reality, anemia is closely related to poverty and socio-economic inequality, which makes it difficult for many people to meet their nutritional needs and, in many cases, also causes them to lack adequate information and knowledge about nutrition and health risks.

The issue is also inseparable from the problem of limited access to affordable nutritious food, lack of access to quality education, inequality in access to health services in many areas, and lack of access to employment and broader economic opportunities, which are structurally and culturally faced mainly by girls and women.

Therefore, systemic interventions are needed to prevent and overcome anemia at the national level, which go beyond specific nutritional interventions and improved health services. Addressing anemia among adolescent girls and women must be done with a comprehensive, coherent, and integrated approach that considers the various aspects of needs that determine the health and wellbeing of each person. Governments and all key stakeholders must increase their commitment and work together.

Editor: Nazalea Kusuma

Translator: Kresentia Madina

The original version of this article is published in Indonesian at Green Network Asia – Indonesia.

Join Green Network Asia – An Ecosystem of Shared Value for Sustainable Development.

Learn, share, network, and get involved in our movement to create positive impact for people and the planet through our public education and multi-stakeholder advocacy on sustainability-related issues and sustainable development.

Choose Your Plan

Continue Reading

Previous: How Supporting Women’s Entrepreneurship Drives Economic Growth and Better Society for All
Next: Exploring the Impacts of Disasters on Education

Learn More from GNA Knowledge Hub

a tray of fish with other seafood and knives surrounding it on a board Turning Seafood Waste into Opportunity for a Sustainable Blue Economy
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • News

Turning Seafood Waste into Opportunity for a Sustainable Blue Economy

by Attiatul Noor October 28, 2025
A man selling and fanning grilled corns beside a table full of young coconuts. Integrating Sustainability in Indonesia’s Gastrodiplomacy Efforts
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • News

Integrating Sustainability in Indonesia’s Gastrodiplomacy Efforts

by Nazalea Kusuma and Dina Oktaferia October 27, 2025
an illustration of an open book with a magnifying glass on top of it Maintaining Healthy Skepticism on Corporate Climate Claims
  • GNA Advisor Column
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • Opinion

Maintaining Healthy Skepticism on Corporate Climate Claims

by Jalal October 24, 2025
people helping each other, to the top of tree Not Just Leading, But Transforming: How Women Are Reshaping Climate Justice in Asia
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • Opinion

Not Just Leading, But Transforming: How Women Are Reshaping Climate Justice in Asia

by Cut Nurul Aidha and Aimee Santos-Lyons October 23, 2025
An aerial view of a combine harvester and a tractor with a trailer working in adjacent fields, one green and the other golden from the harvest. Global Food Systems Transformation for Planetary Health
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • News

Global Food Systems Transformation for Planetary Health

by Kresentia Madina October 22, 2025
A man rowing a boat with a fish catch in his boat Empowering Small-Scale Fish Farmers for Sustainable Aquaculture
  • GNA Knowledge Hub
  • News

Empowering Small-Scale Fish Farmers for Sustainable Aquaculture

by Attiatul Noor October 21, 2025

About Us

  • GNA CEO’s Letter
  • GNA In-House Team
  • GNA Author Network
  • GNA Op-ed Article Guidelines
  • GNA Grassroots Report Guidelines
  • GNA Advertorial Services
  • GNA Press Release Placement Services
  • GNA Internship Program
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
© 2021-2025 Green Network Asia