Iron (Ferrous Bisglycinate Chelate — Ferrochel®)
5 mg per serve
Iron deficiency is one of the most common nutritional deficiencies in childhood worldwide, and is directly linked to impaired cognitive development, reduced attention span, behavioural changes, and compromised immune function. These effects can persist even after iron levels are corrected. Most kids' gummy vitamins contain zero iron because it's difficult to formulate — it tastes metallic and can stain teeth. We use ferrous bisglycinate chelate (Ferrochel®), which in clinical trials demonstrated 90.9% bioavailability versus just 26.7% for standard ferrous sulfate. It doesn't cause the constipation, metallic taste, or tooth staining associated with conventional iron supplements.
Form: Ferrous Bisglycinate Chelate (Ferrochel®) · Balchem/Albion Minerals, Utah USA — patented amino acid chelate, 3.4× more bioavailable than ferrous sulfate
🇺🇸 USA
Published Research
Pineda O, Ashmead HD. (2001). Effectiveness of treatment of iron-deficiency anemia in infants and young children with ferrous bis-glycinate chelate. Nutrition, 17(5), 381–384. — Demonstrated 90.9% bioavailability for bisglycinate vs 26.7% for ferrous sulfate in infants.
Name JJ, et al. (2018). Iron bisglycinate chelate and polymaltose iron for the treatment of iron deficiency anemia: A pilot randomized trial. Current Pediatric Reviews, 14(4), 261–268.
Jáuregui-Lobera I. (2014). Iron deficiency and cognitive functions. Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment, 10, 2087–2095.
Carter RC, et al. (2010). Iron deficiency anemia and cognitive function in infancy. Pediatrics, 126(2), e427–e434.
Algarín C, et al. (2023). Effects of iron supplementation on cognitive development in school-age children: Systematic review and meta-analysis. PLOS ONE, 18(6), e0287703.