Hijab et ses conséquences sur la santé: Difference between revisions
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It is sometimes suggested, in response, that long-term excessive exposure to UV radiation from sunlight can cause skin cancer and other ailments. However, according to epidemiologist Robyn Lucas at Australian National University,<ref>[{{Reference archive|1=http://web.archive.org/web/20090410154214/http://nceph.anu.edu.au/Staff_Students/staff_pages/lucas.php|2=2011-08-20}} National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health] - Australian National University, October 17, 2008</ref> analysis of lifespan versus disease shows that far more lives are lost to diseases caused by lack of sunlight than by those caused by too much,<ref>Deborah Kotz - [{{Reference archive|1=http://health.usnews.com/health-news/family-health/heart/articles/2008/06/23/time-in-the-sun-how-much-is-needed-for-vitamin-d|2=2011-08-20}} Time in the Sun: How Much Is Needed for Vitamin D?] - U.S.News, June 23, 2008</ref> and of course, a women is always capable of avoiding what she feels to be too much or too little sunlight, but the restrictive Islamic dress laws require, in effect, that this ability is taken away from her. | It is sometimes suggested, in response, that long-term excessive exposure to UV radiation from sunlight can cause skin cancer and other ailments. However, according to epidemiologist Robyn Lucas at Australian National University,<ref>[{{Reference archive|1=http://web.archive.org/web/20090410154214/http://nceph.anu.edu.au/Staff_Students/staff_pages/lucas.php|2=2011-08-20}} National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health] - Australian National University, October 17, 2008</ref> analysis of lifespan versus disease shows that far more lives are lost to diseases caused by lack of sunlight than by those caused by too much,<ref>Deborah Kotz - [{{Reference archive|1=http://health.usnews.com/health-news/family-health/heart/articles/2008/06/23/time-in-the-sun-how-much-is-needed-for-vitamin-d|2=2011-08-20}} Time in the Sun: How Much Is Needed for Vitamin D?] - U.S.News, June 23, 2008</ref> and of course, a women is always capable of avoiding what she feels to be too much or too little sunlight, but the restrictive Islamic dress laws require, in effect, that this ability is taken away from her. | ||
== | ==Voir également== | ||
*[[Health]] | *[[Health]] | ||
*[[Hijab]] | *[[Hijab]] | ||
{{Translation-links-english|[[Последици за здравето от ислямското облекло|Bulgarian]], [[Wpływ muzułmańskiego stroju na zdrowie|Polish]], [[Efectos sobre la Salud de la Vestimenta Islámica|Spanish]], [[Zdravotní účinky islámského oděvu|Czech]]}} | {{Translation-links-english|[[Последици за здравето от ислямското облекло|Bulgarian]], [[Wpływ muzułmańskiego stroju na zdrowie|Polish]], [[Efectos sobre la Salud de la Vestimenta Islámica|Spanish]], [[Zdravotní účinky islámského oděvu|Czech]]}} | ||
== | ==Liens externes== | ||
*[http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/272307 Women could endanger their health by wearing burqas] - ''Digital Journal'' | *[http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/272307 Women could endanger their health by wearing burqas] - ''Digital Journal'' | ||
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*[http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/Burqa-clad-women-prone-to-Vitamin-D-deficiency-Doctors/articleshow/20468505.cms Burqa-clad women prone to vitamin D deficiency: Doctors] - ''The Times of India'' | *[http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/Burqa-clad-women-prone-to-Vitamin-D-deficiency-Doctors/articleshow/20468505.cms Burqa-clad women prone to vitamin D deficiency: Doctors] - ''The Times of India'' | ||
== | ==Références== | ||
{{Reflist|30em}} | {{Reflist|30em}} |
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Cet article traite du hijab et des effets potentiels et observés sur la santé des femmes qui choisissent, subissent des pressions ou sont forcées de le porter.
Le hijab
La majorité des femmes musulmanes dans le monde respectent l’exigence islamique d’observer le hijab (une forme de tenue islamique). Cela va du simple port d’un couvre-chef à la burqa (une forme de "hijab complet") qui couvre presque toute la peau exposée.
Le hijab complet peut être constitué des éléments suivants :
- Le jilbab ; il s’agit de tout manteau ou vêtement long et ample porté par les femmes.
- Le khimar ; un foulard ou une écharpe, appelé souvent et simplement "hijab", utilisé pour couvrir la tête et le cou.
- Le niqab ; un morceau de tissu qui voile le visage.
Certains juristes musulmans considèrent le port du niqab comme wajib (obligatoire), tandis que d’autres pensent qu’il est mustahab (favorisé par Allah).[1]
Les effets sur la santé
La communauté médicale est préoccupée par certains des effets sur la santé qui découlent des modèles extrêmes de tenues vestimentaires islamiques, avec principalement des problèmes de carence en vitamine D suite au manque de peau exposée aux rayons UV. Il a été établi par des preuves scientifiques crédibles que presque toutes les femmes qui observent le hijab complet sont chroniquement déficientes en vitamine D.[2] La vitamine D est un nutriment vital et une carence de ce genre peut conduire diverses maladies.
Carence en vitamine D
La vitamine D est une vitamine liposoluble qui est un nutriment essentiel pour la santé humaine.[3][4] La vitamine D est synthétisée lorsque les rayons ultraviolets du soleil frappent la peau humaine, déclenchant ainsi une série de réactions, et c’est par cette méthode que la grande majorité de l’apport quotidien en vitamine D d’une personne est produite. Elle est naturellement absente dans presque tous les aliments couramment consommés, très peu d’aliments de choix contiennent des quantités appréciables et très peu de produits de consommation en sont enrichis.[5]
Le rôle principal de la vitamine D dans le corps est de réguler les bonnes quantités de calcium présentes dans le sang. Cette vitamine aide à l’absorption du calcium pour créer des os sains et solides. Des quantités insuffisantes de vitamine D peuvent entraîner une faiblesse, une fragilité et une difformité des os ; une maladie est d’ailleurs connue sous le nom d’ostéomalacie chez les adultes et de rachitisme chez les enfants. Des quantités suffisantes de vitamine D sont également cruciales dans la prévention des fractures et de l’ostéoporose chez les personnes âgées.[6]
Low levels of Vitamin D have also been linked to a whole host of devastating disorders including cardiovascular diseases, type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis. There is also a strong association between deficiency in Vitamin D and an increased risk of developing several deadly cancers, including breast cancer.[7]
The concern is not only towards the woman who chooses to observe the more covering forms of Islamic dress but also towards any potential children she may carry. Infants born to vitamin D deficient mothers have been found to suffer from an increased prevalence of seizures.[8] If these children observe the full hijab in childhood, they run the risk of not reaching the height they would have otherwise reached if they were not vitamin D deficient.[9]
Islamic Dress and Health
Since almost all the daily intake of Vitamin D is from sunlight, exposure there is significant concern for women who wear the burqa or "full hijab". This style of dress, leaving only a very small portion of skin around the eyes exposed, greatly reduces the surface area of the body which sunlight is exposed to and hence reduces the amount of Vitamin D synthesized. Such low rates of Vitamin D production will quickly exhaust the bodies excess emergency stores of Vitamin D contained in the fat and the person will likely go into a deficient state.
Due to this reason, serious vitamin D deficiency is wide-spread in many Muslim majority countries. A study performed by doctors at King Fahd University Hospital in Saudi Arabia, showed that out of all 52 women tested, all had seriously deficient levels of Vitamin D and were at risk of many serious health problems, despite living in one of the sunniest places on the planet.[10] Furthermore, in a study undertaken in Jordan, 83.3% of women wearing the most covering style of Islamic dresses were found to be deficient in summer time. This is rather striking when compared to the fact only 18.2% of Jordanian men studied were found to be deficient.[11] Jordan, like Saudi Arabia, holds the distinction of being one of the sunniest places on the planet, so the effect of wearing the burqa on Vitamin D levels and health is profound.
Effect of Ethnicity and Migration
There is also concern for the health of immigrants from Islamic majority countries, most of which are around the equator and receive the highest amount of sunlight of any place on earth. There concern arises when these women migrate to countries with lower amounts of sunlight throughout the year compared to their previous home country. Skin tone is darkest at the equator in response to the sunlight.[12][13] Darker skin blocks out significantly more UV radiation and hence decreases Vitamin D production by an enormous amount (people with dark skin pigmentation may need 20 - 30 times as much exposure to sunlight).[14] All these factors combined with the heavily covering Islamic dress create serious potential health concerns for Islamic migrants in countries away from the equator such as Canada, the United States, Europe and Australia.[15][16]
This is further evidenced by numerous scientific studies. A study was undertaken in Dearborn, Michigan, the most-concentrated Arab-American settlement in the United States to assess the relationship between Vitamin D levels and Islamic dress choice in migrant Arab-American Muslim women. The average vitamin D level was found to be 4 ng/ml in veiled women who undertook no vitamin D supplementation and 7 ng/ml in women who wore the same style veil but chose to take supplements.[17] The threshold for rickets and osteomalacia risk is 8 ng/ml and below; clinical deficiency is considered as anything below 16 ng/ml.[18] This illustrates a very serious health risk for migrant Muslim women who immigrate to such countries and wear the burqa.
In the United Kingdom, cases of rickets have been rare until recently. Cases of the disease have increased dramatically due to the growing Muslim population.[19][20][21]
Obesity
It has been noted that the observance of hijab, the garments and the traditions surrounding them, can discourage exercise both psychologically and practically.[22][23] The style of dress can make it easy to hide the bloat of a large meal, and it can be physically restrictive for those who wish to exercise, especially outdoors where one has to be aware of the weather (if it is too hot or humid). In the West, where most indoor gyms are mixed-sex, exercise without Islamic dress can be very difficult for observant Muslim women, and some forms of Islamic dress can make playing almost any sport nearly impossible.[22][23]
According to The Economist magazine’s world rankings, the countries with the highest obesity rates among women are Muslim countries[22] (data from 1999-2003 show 8 of the top 10 to be Muslim majorities; Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Palestinian territories, Lebanon, Albania, Bahrain, Egypt, and the United Arab Emirates),[24] and a 2006 study presented by Qatari expert Issam Abd Rabbu at the "Facts About Obesity" seminar, found that up to 70 percent of women living in the Gulf Arab states (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates) were overweight or obese.[25] Dr. Abdul Rahman Musaiqir, head of the Arab Center for Nutrition at Bahrain University, has said the problem of obesity among women in the Gulf states is being disguised by their Islamic dress, and that obesity rates are much higher than in developed countries.[26]
A 2011 study issued by the National Commercial Bank (NCB), Saudi Arabia’s largest bank, found that the number of Saudis suffering from high blood pressure, diabetes and obesity is increasing at an alarming rate, and a survey released by the Saudi Diabetes and Endocrine Association (SDEA) in 2010 showed that over 70 percent of the Saudi population are "alarmingly obese".[27] Figures released by the Qatar Diabetes Association (QDA) state that 20% of the population has been diagnosed as diabetic in Qatar, and the disorder is affecting more and more children.[23] Some of the health problems associated with obesity include; heart disease, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, painful wear and inflammation on weight-bearing joints, breathing problems and sleep apnea.[28]
Implications for the Islamic Faith
The observance of hijab prevents women from getting enough vitamin D. This can lead to a whole host of disorders. For Islam as a religion, this appears to have troublesome implications.
Islam is considered by its adherents to be the perfect way of life for mankind - this appears to be a difficult position to maintain when one considers that the teachings of Islam's omniscient, omnibenevolent deity would pose a major health risk to his female followers.
It could be argued that today this can be combated with vitamin D supplementation combined with daily exposure to the sun in the privacy of ones backyard or some other location safe from the eyes of non-mahram men. However, this does not appear to be a satisfactory solution.
Many are not fortunate enough to have their own private gardens where they can sit, and sitting in front of a window inside their homes will not help because window glass only lets through UV-A rays, not UV-B and UV-C. UV-B rays are needed for the production of vitamin D.[29]
Furthermore, it was only in 1923 that it was established when 7-dehydrocholesterol is irradiated with light, a form of a fat-soluble vitamin is produced,[30] and until the mid-1930s, when the first commercial yeast-extract and semi-synthetic vitamin C supplement tablets were sold, vitamins were obtained solely through food intake and (in the case of vitamin D) through exposure to the sun.[31]
So what of the Muslim women prior to the 1930s and their vitamin intake? Furthermore, the Qur'an and hadith literature, make no mention at all of the matter.
It is sometimes suggested, in response, that long-term excessive exposure to UV radiation from sunlight can cause skin cancer and other ailments. However, according to epidemiologist Robyn Lucas at Australian National University,[32] analysis of lifespan versus disease shows that far more lives are lost to diseases caused by lack of sunlight than by those caused by too much,[33] and of course, a women is always capable of avoiding what she feels to be too much or too little sunlight, but the restrictive Islamic dress laws require, in effect, that this ability is taken away from her.
Voir également
Translations
- A version of this page is also available in the following languages: Bulgarian, Polish, Spanish, Czech. For additional languages, see the sidebar on the left.
Liens externes
- Women could endanger their health by wearing burqas - Digital Journal
- Addressing vitamin D deficiency among veiled pregnant women in Australia - Excerpt from 'Nutrition & Dietetics: The Journal of the Dietitians Association of Australia
- Middle Eastern women may have vitamin D deficiency - Reuters
- The consequences of Islamic dress - FFI Forum
- Synthetic Hijabs Get Under Tajik Women's Skin - Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
- Burqa-clad women prone to vitamin D deficiency: Doctors - The Times of India
Références
- ↑ Hijab In The Al-Quran And Sunnah - Khalifah Institute, consulté le 3 juillet 2011
- ↑ Mishal, A.A., Effects of Different Dress Styles on Vitamin D Levels in Healthy Young Jordanian Women. Osteoporosis International, 2001. 12(11): p. 931-935.
- ↑ Moan, J. et A. Juzeniene, Solar radiation and human health. Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology, 2010: p. 109-110.
- ↑ Bandgar, T.R., Vitamin d and hip fractures: Indian scenario. The Journal of the Association of Physicians of India, 2010. 58(9): p. 535-537.
- ↑ Office of Dietary Supplements - National Institutes of Health. Dietary Supplement Fact Sheet: Vitamin D. 2011. Consulté le 2 juillet 2011.
- ↑ Vitamin D - Mayo Clinic. 2011. Consulté le 2 juillet 2011
- ↑ Holick, M.F., Sunlight and vitamin D for bone health and prevention of autoimmune diseases, cancers, and cardiovascular disease. The American journal of clinical nutrition, 2004. 80(6 Suppl).
- ↑ Bandgar, T.R., Vitamin d and hip fractures: Indian scenario. The Journal of the Association of Physicians of India, 2010. 58(9): p. 535-537.
- ↑ Holick, M.F., Sunlight and vitamin D for bone health and prevention of autoimmune diseases, cancers, and cardiovascular disease. The American journal of clinical nutrition, 2004. 80(6 Suppl)
- ↑ Elsammak, M.Y., et al., Vitamin D deficiency in Saudi Arabs. Hormone and Metabolic Research, 2010. 42(5): p. 364-368.
- ↑ Mishal, A.A., Effects of Different Dress Styles on Vitamin D Levels in Healthy Young Jordanian Women. Osteoporosis International, 2001. 12(11): p. 931-935.
- ↑ Barsh, G.S., What Controls Variation in Human Skin Color? PLoS Biol, 2003. 1(1): p. e27.
- ↑ Relethford, J.H., Hemispheric difference in human skin color. American journal of physical anthropology, 1997. 104(4): p. 449-457.
- ↑ Mike Adams - Vitamin D myths, facts and statistics - NaturalNews, January 1, 2005
- ↑ Hagenau, T., et al., Global vitamin D levels in relation to age, gender, skin pigmentation and latitude: an ecologic meta-regression analysis. Osteoporosis International, 2009. 20(1): p. 133-140.
- ↑ Hanley, D.A. and K.S. Davison, Vitamin D Insufficiency in North America. The Journal of Nutrition, 2005. 135(2): p. 332-337
- ↑ Hobbs, R., et al., Severe Vitamin D Deficiency in Arab-American Women Living in Dearborn, Michigan. Endocrine Practice, 2009. 15(1): p. 35-40.
- ↑ Heaney, PR. Functional indices of vitamin D status and ramifications of vitamin D deficiency. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2004; 80 : S1706 – S1709
- ↑ Jeremy Laurance, "Rise in rickets linked to ethnic groups that shun the sun", The Independent, July 25, 2011 (archived), http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/rise-in-rickets-linked-to-ethnic-groups-that-shun-the-sun-2319920.html.
- ↑ Katerina Nikolas, "Rickets on the increase amongst British children", DigitalJournal, December 16, 2011 (archived), http://digitaljournal.com/article/316191.
- ↑ "Rickets upsurge among UK Asians", BBC News, February 5, 2001 (archived), http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/1154211.stm.
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 22.2 Caroline May - The burka may be making Muslim women fatter by discouraging exercise - The Daily Caller, July 1, 2010
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 23.2 Qatar: surge in diabetes/obesity, unhealthy Arab habits - ANSAmed, March 13, 2012
- ↑ Economist.com rankings for obesity among women
- ↑ Up to 70% of Gulf women are obese - Middle East Online, September 29, 2005
- ↑ Gulf women hide weight under gowns - Emirates 24/7, January 12, 2011
- ↑ Nadim Kawach - Blood pressure and obesity epidemic in Saudi - Emirates 24/7, May 2, 2011
- ↑ Health Problems Associated with Obesity - The Nation's Health, March 2011
- ↑ Shereen Jegtvig - How Much Sun Exposure Do I Need for Vitamin D? - About.com, October 06, 2011
- ↑ Unraveling The Enigma Of Vitamin D - United States National Academy of Sciences, accessed August 6, 2011
- ↑ Vitamin - Wikipedia, accessed August 6, 2011
- ↑ National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health - Australian National University, October 17, 2008
- ↑ Deborah Kotz - Time in the Sun: How Much Is Needed for Vitamin D? - U.S.News, June 23, 2008