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Nursing Ethics
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Lived Religion: Implications for Nursing Ethics

Sheryl Reimer-Kirkham

Trinity Western University, 7600 Glover Road, Langley, BC, V2Y 1Y1, Canada, sheryl.kirkham{at}twu.ca

This article explores how ethics and religion interface in everyday life by drawing on a study examining the negotiation of religious and spiritual plurality in health care. Employing methods of critical ethnography, namely, interviews and participant observation, data were collected from patients, health care providers, administrators and spiritual care providers. The findings revealed the degree to which `lived religion' was intertwined with `lived ethics' for many participants; particularly for people from the Sikh faith. For these participants, religion was woven into everyday life, making distinctions between public and private, secular and sacred spaces improbable. Individual interactions, institutional resource allocation, and social discourses are all embedded in social relationships of power that prevent religion from being a solely personal or private matter. Strategies for the reintegration of religion into nursing ethics are: adjusting professional codes and theories of ethics to reflect the influence of religion; and the contribution of critical perspectives, such as postcolonial feminism, to the understanding of lived ethics.

Key Words: culture • nursing ethics • postcolonial theory • religion • Sikhism

Nursing Ethics, Vol. 16, No. 4, 406-417 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0969733009104605


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M. D Fowler
Religion, Bioethics and Nursing Practice
Nursing Ethics, July 1, 2009; 16(4): 393 - 405.
[Abstract] [PDF]