REFERENCES
- Boskabadi, H., A. Mehdizadeh, and Z. Alboumiri. 2014. Effect of the number of Ramadan fasting days on maternal and neonatal outcomes. Journal of Fasting and Health 2(2): 84–89.
- Charles, S. 2011. Obstetricians and violence against women. American Journal of Bioethics 11(12): 51–6.
- Doniger, G. M., E. S. Simon, and A. Z. Zivotofsky. 2006. Comprehensive computerized assessment of cognitive sequelae of a complete 12–16 hour fast. Behavior Neuroscience 120(4): 804–16.
- Kaplan, M., A. I. Eidelman, and Y. Aboulafia. 1983. Fasting and the precipitation of labor. The Yom Kippur Effect.. Journal of the American Medical Association 250(10): 1317–18.
- Minkoff, H., and M. F. Marshall. 2016. Fetal risks, relative risks, and relatives' risks. American Journal of Bioethics 16(2): 3–11.
- Shalit, N., R. Shalit, and E. Sheiner. 2015. The effect of a 25-hour fast during the Day of Atonement on preterm delivery. Journal Maternal Fetal Neonatal Medicine 28(12): 1410–13.
- Susser, E., and C. V. Ananth. 2013. Invited commentary: Is prenatal fasting during Ramadan related to adult health outcomes? A novel and important question for epidemiology. American Journal of Epidemiology 177(8): 737–40.
- Wiser, A., E. Maymon, M. Mazor, I. Shoham-Vardi, T. Silberstein, A. Wiznitzer, and M. Katz. 1997. Effect of the Yom Kippur fast on parturition [article in Hebrew]. Harefuah 132(11): 745–48, 824.
- Zivotofsky, A. Z., and N. T. Zivotofsky. 2011. Withholding or necessary filtering of information? American Journal of Bioethics 11(12): 70–72.