Assessing the Role of Micronutrient Fortification in Reducing Anemia Rates in Nigeria: A Review
Kamanzi Ntakirutimana G.
School of Natural and Applied Sciences Kampala International University Uganda
ABSTRACT
Anemia remains a major public-health burden in Nigeria, especially among children under five and women of reproductive age. Large-scale food fortification (LSFF), adding iron and other micronutrients to widely consumed staples and condiments, is recommended by WHO as a cost-effective population intervention to prevent and reduce micronutrient deficiencies, including iron deficiency anemia. Nigeria has enacted mandatory and voluntary fortification policies for staples (wheat and maize flour) and other vehicles, but program impact has been uneven due to low coverage of fortified products, compliance gaps, variable bioavailability of iron compounds used, dietary inhibitors, infection burden (notably malaria and helminths), and monitoring constraints. A growing body of evidence from efficacy trials, program evaluations, and reviews shows that appropriately designed fortification (correct iron compound, sufficient fortification level, high coverage, and robust monitoring) can raise iron stores and hemoglobin in target populations; however, real-world effectiveness depends on implementation quality. This review synthesizes current evidence from national surveillance, program assessments, trials conducted in Nigeria and the region, and international guidance, identifies key barriers and enabling factors, and proposes programmatic and research priorities to maximize LSFF’s contribution to anemia reduction in Nigeria.
Keywords: Micronutrient fortification, anemia reduction, iron deficiency, large-scale food fortification (LSFF), Nigeria.
CITE AS: Kamanzi Ntakirutimana G. (2026). Assessing the Role of Micronutrient Fortification in Reducing Anemia Rates in Nigeria: A Review. INOSR APPLIED SCIENCES 14(2):38-44.
https://doi.org/10.59298/INOSRAS/2025/14.2.3844