Weekend Doctor: Folic acid, why take it?
By Abigail Maas, NPRN-CNP
Certified nurse practitioner
Folic acid is a human-made form of the B-vitamin folate. Our bodies use it to make new cells. Everyone needs folic acid to be healthy, but especially before pregnancy.
Folic acid helps form the neural tube and is known to decrease the risk of major congenital disabilities of an unborn baby’s brain (anencephaly) and spine (spina bifida).
Neural tube defects are the second most common major congenital anomaly. It is important to start folic acid supplementation prior to pregnancy due to these congenital disabilities occurring in the first few weeks of pregnancy.
Neural tube development typically happens before women find out they are pregnant. Folic acid helps the body form and grow new red blood cells, and prevents folate-deficiency anemia outside of pregnancy.
Folic acid can be received in two ways:
• Through the food we eat or as a vitamin. Folate is naturally occurring in foods such as spinach, leafy vegetables, oranges, nuts, beans, poultry and whole grains, among others.
• Folic acid is also found in fortified foods, or “enriched foods” such as pasta, bread and cereals. Labels will typically have the term “enriched” if folic acid is added.
It is important to talk with your health care provider regarding specific recommendations based on past personal and family history.
A minimum recommendation is to take 400 micrograms daily, ideally before becoming pregnant. Current recommendations encourage women of reproductive age to take a daily folic acid supplement in addition to consuming food with folate.
Stories Posted This Week
Sunday, June 14, 2026
Saturday, June 13, 2026
Friday, June 12, 2026
- Ada Icon headlines, June 12
- Blanchard River Watershed Partnership hosts 5K trail run on July 25
- Beaverdam to begin water treatment plant repairs
- Save the date: Declaration of Independence reading, July 8
- Bluffton Police answer 630 calls for service in May 2026
- Great wealth disparity and our eroding democracy
Thursday, June 11, 2026
- Ada Icon headlines, June 11
- Splitting headache: Fasting and migraines
- Pamela Ann Bricker was a social worker
- Bluffton Community Garage Sales, June 18-19-20
- Open and improved Elm St. segment
- Ultimate car seat guide recommended by Bluffton police
- Senior Center's June community meal shifts to summer schedule