# Ramadan During Pregnancy and Offspring Age at Menarche in Indonesia: A Quasi-Experimental Study

**Authors:** Van My Tran, Reyn van Ewijk, Fabienne Pradella

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/nu17091406 · Nutrients · 2025-04-22

## TL;DR

This study investigates whether Ramadan fasting during pregnancy in Indonesia affects the age at which daughters start menstruating.

## Contribution

The study explores a milder nutritional change (Ramadan fasting) during pregnancy in a middle-income country, expanding beyond extreme cases like famine.

## Key findings

- No association was found between Ramadan during pregnancy and offspring age at menarche.
- Results were consistent across different pregnancy trimesters and subgroups.
- Subtle nutritional restrictions during pregnancy may not significantly affect pubertal timing.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Animal models have suggested a link between maternal nutrition and offspring pubertal onset. Due to ethical and practical concerns, human studies on this topic remained scarce and focused on extreme nutritional shocks in high-income settings, such as Dutch famine. This paper expands on these findings by investigating the effects of a milder form of nutritional alteration during pregnancy—Ramadan fasting—in a middle-income context, Indonesia. We use offspring age at menarche (AAM) as an indicator of pubertal timing and female reproductive health. Our research has broader implications beyond the Muslim community, as intermittent fasting during pregnancy is also widely practiced by non-Muslims, e.g., meal-skipping. Methods: We used data from the Indonesian Family Life Survey (1993–2014, n = 8081) and Indonesian Demographic and Health Surveys (2002–2007, n = 13,241). OLS and Cox regressions were applied to compare the AAM of female Muslims who were prenatally exposed to Ramadan and those of female Muslims who were not. Exposure was determined based on the overlap between pregnancy and a Ramadan. We further subdivided this overlap into trimester-specific categories, adjusting for urban–rural residence, birth month, birth year, birth year squared, and survey wave. Results: No associations between Ramadan during pregnancy and AAM were found, irrespective of the pregnancy trimester overlapping with Ramadan. These results were stable when we restricted the sample to women with shorter recall periods and younger women at the time of survey. Conclusions: While subtle restrictions in maternal nutrition during pregnancy are critical for offspring health, the impact on menarcheal onset might be limited.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

70 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12073751/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12073751