0000000000778458

AUTHOR

Ary I. Savitri

showing 2 related works from this author

Ramadan exposure and birth outcomes: a population-based study from the Netherlands.

2020

AbstractBackground:Ramadan, the Islamic month of daytime fasting, is observed by many pregnant Muslims. Although pregnant women are exempt, many prefer to fast. Previous research has shown long-term adverse effects on various health outcomes among the offspring, but evidence on effects on perinatal outcomes is mixed. This study investigates effects of Ramadan during pregnancy among Muslims in the Netherlands.Methods:Data from the Perinatal Registry of the Netherlands (Perined) on all births between 2000 and 2010 to mothers recorded as Mediterranean (i.e. of Turkish/Moroccan descent, a proxy for Muslim) (n = 139,322) or as ethnically Dutch (n = 1,481,435) were used. Ramadan exposure was defi…

AdultfastingOffspringBirth weightMedicine (miscellaneous)MothersGestational AgeLogistic regressionIslamOddsCohort Studies03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineSDG 3 - Good Health and Well-beingPregnancy0502 economics and businessMedicineBirth WeightHumans030212 general & internal medicineRegistries050207 economicsPerinatal MortalityNetherlandsRamadanPregnancybusiness.industry05 social sciencesbirth outcomesInfant Newbornbirth weightOdds ratioFastingMaternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomenamedicine.diseaseConfidence intervalApgar Score/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/good_health_and_well_beingGestationFemalepregnancybusinessDemographyMaternal AgeJournal of developmental origins of health and disease
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Ramadan fasting and newborn's birth weight in pregnant Muslim women in The Netherlands.

2014

Many Muslim women worldwide are pregnant during Ramadan and adhere to Ramadan fasting during pregnancy. In the present study, we determined whether maternal adherence to Ramadan fasting during pregnancy has an impact on the birth weight of the newborn, and whether the effects differed according to trimester in which Ramadan fasting took place. A prospective cohort study was conducted in 130 pregnant Muslim women who attended antenatal care in Amsterdam and Zaanstad, The Netherlands. Data on adherence to Ramadan fasting during pregnancy and demographics were self-reported by pregnant women, and the outcome of the newborn was retrieved from medical records after delivery. The results showed t…

AdultPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyDemographicsTurkeyBirth weightMedicine (miscellaneous)Early pregnancy factorGestational AgeIslamCohort StudiesPregnancymedicineBirth WeightHumansProspective StudiesProspective cohort studyNetherlandsPregnancyNutrition and Dieteticsbiologybusiness.industryMedical recordInfant NewbornFastingmedicine.diseaseFirst trimesterMoroccobiology.proteinEducational StatusFemalebusinessThe British journal of nutrition
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