Prevalence and Associated Factors of Anemia among Pregnant Women Receiving Antenatal Care at Kassala New Hospital, Eastern Sudan-2020

Authors

  • Kamla Bashir Adam Department of Food Hygiene and Safety, Faculty of Public Health, Al-Zaeim Al-Azhari University, Khartoum North, Sudan
  • Wafeeq Babiker Abu Al-Noor Mohamed Ministry of Health, Kassala State, Eastern Sudan
  • Ibrahim Mohammed Eissa Faculty of Medical Laboratories, Al-Zaeim Al-Azhari University, Khartoum North, Sudan
  • Ekram Adam Al-Doom Department of Food Hygiene and Safety, Faculty of Public Health, Al-Zaeim Al-Azhari University, Khartoum North, Sudan
  • Zeinab Ahmed Abbas Department of Epidemiology, Faculty of Public Health, Al-Zaeim Al-Azhari University, Khartoum North, Sudan
  • Nada Mohamed Osman Department of Food Hygiene and Safety, Faculty of Public Health, Al-Zaeim Al-Azhari University, Khartoum North, Sudan

Keywords:

Anemia, Pregnancy, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Eastern Sudan, Kassala, Malaria, Nutrition

Abstract

This cross-sectional study, conducted at Kassala New Hospital, Eastern Sudan, from September to October 2020, investigated the prevalence and determinants of anemia among 200 systematically selected pregnant women. The prevalence of anemia (Hb < 11 g/dL) was 49.5%, comprising 26% mild, 23% moderate, and 0.5% severe cases. Statistical analysis revealed anemia was significantly associated with lower educational attainment (ρ = -0.29) and reduced family income (ρ = -0.18). Key modifiable risk factors included non-use of iron supplements (χ²=15.8, p<0.001), infrequent consumption of fish (χ²=10.3, p=0.001) and eggs (χ²=8.9, p=0.003), and a history of malaria during pregnancy (χ²=5.0, p=0.025). Prevalence also positively correlated with advancing gestational age (ρ=0.41, p<0.001). The study concludes that anemia represents a severe public health problem in this setting, driven by socioeconomic disadvantage, limited education, suboptimal dietary practices, and malaria. A multi-sectoral intervention strategy is recommended, emphasizing female education, strengthened antenatal iron supplementation and nutrition counseling, intensified malaria prevention, and promotion of early antenatal care attendance.

Published

2026-02-01

How to Cite

Kamla Bashir Adam, Wafeeq Babiker Abu Al-Noor Mohamed, Ibrahim Mohammed Eissa, Ekram Adam Al-Doom, Zeinab Ahmed Abbas, & Nada Mohamed Osman. (2026). Prevalence and Associated Factors of Anemia among Pregnant Women Receiving Antenatal Care at Kassala New Hospital, Eastern Sudan-2020. North African Journal of Scientific Publishing (NAJSP), 4(1), 69–72. Retrieved from https://najsp.com/index.php/home/article/view/751

Issue

Section

Applied and Natural Sciences