Episode 14: Why Mom Burnout Might Actually Be Low Ferritin

Woman in soft morning light looking contemplative, representing the fatigue of iron deficiency and low ferritin in women

Your ferritin levels might be lower than your doctor tested for.

If you've been told your labs are "normal" but you still feel exhausted, this episode names the thing most annual exams miss: low iron stores.

Sara breaks down why ferritin matters more than hemoglobin for tired women, why the standard reference range of 15 ng/mL is far below where most women actually feel well, why heme iron from animal foods absorbs two to three times more efficiently than plant iron, and what you can do at your next annual physical to actually get the number you need.

Topics covered: the difference between ferritin and hemoglobin, iron deficiency without anemia, why women are most vulnerable, the symptoms that hide in normal bloodwork, heme versus non-heme iron, the foods and drinks that block iron absorption, and exactly what to ask your doctor.

Key Takeaways

  • Ferritin and hemoglobin are not the same thing.
    You can have normal hemoglobin and still have low iron stores.

  • “Normal” doesn’t always mean optimal.
    A lab range can look acceptable even when symptoms are still showing up.

  • Heme iron is absorbed more efficiently than non-heme iron.
    Food form matters when iron stores are depleted.

  • Tea, coffee, and calcium can interfere with absorption.
    Timing around meals can make a real difference.

  • Ask for ferritin and a full iron panel.
    Do not settle for “your labs are normal.”

Research Mentioned

This episode is an educational translation of the following peer-reviewed research. Click any citation to read the original paper.

1.  Al-Naseem A, Sallam A, Choudhury S, Thachil J. "Iron deficiency without anaemia: a diagnosis that matters." Clinical Medicine (London), 2021. 21(2):107–113. doi:10.7861/clinmed.2020-0582

2.  Cancado RD, Leite LAC, Muñoz M. "Defining Global Thresholds for Serum Ferritin: A Challenging Mission in Establishing the Iron Deficiency Diagnosis in This Era of Striving for Health Equity." Diagnostics (Basel), 2025. 15(3):289. doi:10.3390/diagnostics15030289

3.  Ahmad Fuzi SF, Koller D, Bruggraber S, Pereira DI, Dainty JR, Mushtaq S. "A 1-h time interval between a meal containing iron and consumption of tea attenuates the inhibitory effects on iron absorption: a controlled trial in a cohort of healthy UK women using a stable iron isotope." American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2017. 106(6):1413–1421. doi:10.3945/ajcn.117.161364

Links Mentioned

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Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the optimal ferritin level for women?

Standard lab ranges list anything above 15 ng/mL as “normal,” but peer-reviewed research shows women often experience measurable impairment below 50 ng/mL, including reduced thyroid hormone conversion and dopamine synthesis. For active women, menstruating women, and those recovering from pregnancy, optimal ferritin is generally 70 to 100 ng/mL.

Q: Can you have low iron with normal hemoglobin?

Yes. This condition is called iron deficiency without anemia and it is widely documented in peer-reviewed research. Hemoglobin measures iron currently circulating in your blood, while ferritin measures iron stored in your body. You can have normal hemoglobin and critically low ferritin at the same time, which is one of the most common reasons exhausted women are told they are “fine.”

Q: What blocks iron absorption?

Coffee polyphenols, tea tannins, calcium, phytates in whole grains, and oxalates in spinach and chard all inhibit non-heme iron absorption. Research shows tea consumed with an iron-rich meal can cut absorption by more than a third, and a calcium-containing meal can roughly halve iron absorption. A one-hour gap between iron-rich food and these blockers largely restores absorption.

Q: What should I ask my doctor to check for iron deficiency?

Ask for a full iron panel, not just a complete blood count. The full panel includes ferritin, serum iron, transferrin saturation, and total iron binding capacity. Request the actual ferritin number rather than the word “normal,” because if the value is below 50 ng/mL you may still be experiencing suboptimal iron stores even if your doctor says the result is in range.

Q: Is heme iron better than non-heme iron?

Heme iron, which comes from animal foods like meat, fish, and organ meats, is absorbed at 15 to 35 percent. Non-heme iron, which comes from plants like spinach, beans, and fortified cereals, is absorbed at 2 to 20 percent. Heme iron is two to three times more bioavailable, which is why whole-food sources such as beef liver, clams, and oysters are considered the most efficient dietary iron sources for women with low ferritin.

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Episode 15: The Real Case for Organ Supplementation in Your Next Era

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Episode 13: Hair Loss, Skin Aging, and Brittle Nails: The Nutrient Deficiencies Women Miss