Faithful Caregiving: Christian, Hindu, Buddhist and Muslim Spiritual Practices in Palliative Care

Authors

  • Mohamad Firdaus Mohamad Ismail Department of Professional Nursing Studies, Kulliyyah of Nursing, International Islamic University Malaysia, Pahang, Malaysia
  • Nur Fatieha Najwa Sazali Kulliyyah of Nursing, International Islamic University Malaysia, Pahang, Malaysia
  • Ahmad Effat Mokhtar Department of Islamic Studies, Sultan Ahmad Shah Pahang Islamic University, Pahang, Malaysia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31436/ijcs.v7i3.387

References

Miller M, Addicott K, Rosa WE. Spiritual care as a core component of palliative nursing: It’s all about connection—to our patients’ needs, and to our own. Am J Nurs. 2023;123(2):54-59.

Mohamad Ismail MF, Mokhtar AE, Shahadan SZ. Care for Buddhist patients in Malaysia: Islamic perspectives on efficient cultural healthcare. J Islamic Soc Econ Dev. 2024;9(61):353-369.

Mohamad Ismail MF, Romzi NSI, Shahadan SZ. Spiritual care in palliative contexts: Perspectives from Hindu family caregivers – A scoping review. J Al-Sirat. 2024;24(1):179-199.

Mohamad Ismail MF, Sharel SN, Shahadan SZ. Spiritual care in palliative settings: A scoping review of caregivers’ perspectives in selected Islamic countries. Malaysian J Qual Res. 2024;10(1):119-125.

Mohamad Ismail MF, Mokhtar AE, Shahadan SZ. Urgent need: Developing an Islamic framework for non-Muslim patient care. Int J Care Scholars. 2024;7(1):114-115

Mohamad Ismail MF, Mokhtar AE, Shahadan SZ. Exploring the relevance of Islamic culture in cross-cultural and religious nursing care: A scoping review. Ulum Islamiyyah J. 2024;36(2):180-186.

Downloads

Published

2024-11-30

How to Cite

Mohamad Firdaus Mohamad Ismail, Sazali, N. F. N. ., & Ahmad Effat Mokhtar. (2024). Faithful Caregiving: Christian, Hindu, Buddhist and Muslim Spiritual Practices in Palliative Care. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CARE SCHOLARS, 7(3), 188–189. https://doi.org/10.31436/ijcs.v7i3.387