4.2 Article

The social relations of prayer in healthcare: Adding to nursing's equity-oriented professional practice and disciplinary knowledge

Journal

NURSING INQUIRY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nin.12608

Keywords

equity; nursing practice; prayer; qualitative analysis and interpretation; racialized religion; religion; spirituality

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This study explores the role of prayer in nursing and its impact on patients and nurses themselves. The findings show that nurses' kindness can alleviate the loneliness and exclusion experienced by patients, but prayer is rarely incorporated into spiritual support due to uncertainties around permission and professional boundaries. Nurses' engagement with prayer and spiritual support could become a politically charged issue, potentially leading to social exclusion.
Although spiritual practices such as prayer are engaged by many to support well-being and coping, little research has addressed nurses and prayer, whether for themselves or facilitating patients' use of prayer. We conducted a qualitative study to explore how prayer (as a proxy for spirituality and religion) is manifest-whether embraced, tolerated, or resisted-in healthcare, and how institutional and social contexts shape how prayer is understood and enacted. This paper analyzes interviews with 21 nurses in Vancouver and London as a subset of the larger study. Findings show that nurses' kindness can buffer the loneliness and exclusion of ill health and in this way support the spirit of those in their care. Spiritual support for patients rarely incorporated prayer, in part because of ambiguities about permission and professional boundaries. Nurses' engagement with prayer and spiritual support could become a politicized site of religious accommodation, where imposition, religious illiteracy, and racism could derail person-centered care and consequently enact social exclusion. Spiritual support (including prayer) sustained nurses themselves. We propose that nursing's equity-oriented knowledge encompass spirituality and religion as sites of exclusion and inclusion. Nurses must be supported to move past religious illiteracy to provide culturally and spiritually sensitive care with clarity about professional boundaries and collaborative models of spiritual care.

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