What a Decade of Iron Funding Has Taught Us

By GiveWell @ 2026-05-22T20:55 (+18)

This is a new episode of the GiveWell Conversations podcast. You can listen to the episode or read a summary of the conversation below.

Anemia, which is commonly caused by iron deficiency, can cause fatigue, cognitive impairment, and complications during pregnancy—and it affects roughly a quarter of the world’s population. Over the last decade, GiveWell has directed nearly $50 million to programs to address this health issue.

Because of the large number of people affected and the low cost to provide people with iron, we are evaluating additional iron fortification and supplementation programs to potentially increase our grantmaking in this area. At the same time, it has been difficult to determine exactly how much providing people with additional iron improves their lives. GiveWell’s growing research capacity is allowing us to study the programs we’ve funded and to support new research, then to use what we learn to continue improving our funding decisions.

In this episode, GiveWell co-founder and CEO Elie Hassenfeld speaks with Researcher Andrew Martin about GiveWell’s work on iron: why the evidence is more complicated than it might seem, what we’ve learned from years of funding iron programs, and what’s ahead.

 

Listen to Episode 30: What a Decade of Iron Funding Has Taught Us

 

Elie and Andrew discuss:

Line graph showing the metric tons of fortified wheat flour produced by Fortify Health between 2018 and 2025.

GiveWell’s research on iron supplementation and fortification programs exemplifies this moment in GiveWell’s evolution: The research capacity and track record we’ve built are now enabling us to assess past grants, build and evaluate the evidence base, and expand our support of new cost-effective ways to help people in need.

Visit our All Grants Fund page to learn more about how you can support this work, and listen or subscribe to our podcast for our latest updates.

This episode was recorded on May 15, 2026 and represents our best understanding at that time.

To learn more about how we’re learning and improving by analyzing past grants, like the one described in this episode, join our webinar on June 9. Elie will moderate a conversation with Program Directors Alex Cohen and Julie Faller about our grant lookbacks methodology, what we’ve learned, and how the findings are informing our grantmaking. Learn more and register.