Sublingual and buccal tablets during Ramadan
Sublingual and buccal tablets during Ramadan — a calm look at the medical and scholarly considerations.
Quick answer
Whether something "breaks the fast" is a scholarly question, not a software question. What we *can* do is summarize the medical evidence and the major positions that scholars have published, with sources.
The medical picture
The clinical question is whether the medication or procedure introduces a meaningful nutritional or hydrating substance to the body. For some routes (IV nutrition, eye drops with significant systemic absorption) the answer is plainly yes; for others (a metered puff of a bronchodilator, a sublingual tablet that dissolves locally) the answer is medically marginal.
Scholarly positions
Major bodies that have spoken on this topic include the Islamic Organization for Medical Sciences (IOMS), the Muslim Council of Britain's health guidance, and various national fatwa councils. They do not all agree. Our job is to point you to the sources, not to pick one for you.
Practical next steps
1. Plan ahead. Talk to your clinician *before* Ramadan starts about whether your medication can be timed around suhoor and iftar.
2. Do not skip life-saving medication. Insulin, anti-epileptics, antiplatelets, cardiac drugs and biologics should never be stopped to maintain a fast.
3. Bring a named scholar's position to your clinician if the timing question is tight; both sides need to be aligned.