Ramadan Fasting during Pregnancy and Health Outcomes in Offspring: A Systematic Review.

Published
October 24, 2021
Journal
Nutrients
PICOID
4385a370
DOI
Citations
13
Keywords
Islam, fasting, fetal development, humans, infant, newborn, pregnancy, pregnancy outcome
Copyright
Patients/Population/Participants

Muslim mothers and their offspring

Intervention

Ramadan fasting

Comparison

Non-fasting individuals

Outcome

Fetal growth, birth indices, cognitive effects, long-term effects

Abstract

P
I
C
O

Ramadan is one of the five pillars of Islam, during which fasting is obligatory for all healthy individuals. Although pregnant women are exempt from this Islamic law, the majority nevertheless choose to fast. This review aims to identify the effects of Ramadan fasting on the offspring of Muslim mothers, particularly on fetal growth, birth indices, cognitive effects and long-term effects. A systematic literature search was conducted until March 2020 in Web of Science, Pubmed, Cochrane Library, Embase and Google Scholar. Studies were evaluated based on a pre-defined quality score ranging from 0 (low quality) to 10 (high quality), and 43 articles were included. The study quality ranged from 2 to 9 with a mean quality score of 5.4. Only 3 studies had a high quality score (>7), of which one found a lower birth weight among fasting women. Few medium quality studies found a significant negative effect on fetal growth or birth indices. The quality of articles that investigated cognitive and long-term effects was poor. The association between Ramadan fasting and health outcomes of offspring is not supported by strong evidence. To further elucidate the effects of Ramadan fasting, larger prospective and retrospective studies with novel designs are needed.

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