Spiritual Care Unveiled - Religious Literacy in Palliative Care
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2024-10-23
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Sweden is portrayed as being multicultural and multireligious and at the same time,
significantly impacted by secularization and simultaneously highly influenced by secular
values. This diversity necessitates that society develop a deeper understanding of these
variations. The overall aim of this thesis was to examine variations in place of death in
relation to birth country, spiritual care discourses in palliative care research literature,
and how healthcare professionals understand, handle and respond to religiosity and
spirituality among patients and their family carers in palliative home care settings. The
theoretical framework is based on religious literacy, deepened by lived religion and critical
religion. Various methods were used: statistical analysis, discourse analysis, focus groups
and ethnography. The findings show that foreign-born individuals are more likely to die
in hospitals or at home than domestic-born individuals. Region of birth was one of several
factors influencing place of death among foreign-born individuals. In the research
literature, spirituality was described as enigmatic yet inherently human, with an assumption
that every individual has a spiritual dimension. The analysis showed that healthcare
professionals are expected to embody specific qualities in order to do spiritual care. Spiritual
care was seen as crucial for holistic palliative care, focusing on acts like physical touch, silent
presence and listening. In the focus groups, healthcare professionals identified qualities like
“providing support” and “being present” as essential for spiritual care. Participants often
positioned themselves as secular and non-religious, frequently employing an “us versus
them” rhetoric, especially in discussions around truth-telling. In the ethnographic study,
religion and culture were ascribed to the ‘Other’, with a notable silence surrounding
patients’ religiosity in the encounters. A few professionals challenged these norms by
engaging with patients’ spirituality. The study underscores a need for religious literacy in
palliative home care, while also recognizing the diverse forms of religious literacy that
exist. In conclusion, this thesis highlights the need to move beyond simplistic labels
surrounding spirituality and religion, and instead advocates for a dynamic and changing
view of religion as practised and contextual. The findings also reveal a gap between the
theory and practice of spiritual care. By increasing religious literacy at both individual and
organizational levels, healthcare professionals can better approach religious, cultural, and
diverse encounters with greater openness and confidence.
Description
Keywords
Palliative care, religious literacy, spiritual care, person-centred care, participant observation, discourse analysis, equity, end-of-life care