Performing obligatory prayer while hospitalised: perspectives of Muslim patients in a teaching hospital in Malaysia

Supporting obligatory prayer for patients has become the focus of the healthcare system in Malaysia since the 1990s. Despite frameworks, guidelines, and facilities for the patients, recent studies have reported the number of patients who perform obligatory prayers at the hospital is still low. The r...

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Main Authors: Abdul Halim, Ratna Zuhairah, Saidi, Sanisah, Mohd Yusof, Nazri, Che Ahmad, Aminudin, Hassan, Nor Haty, Susanti, Suryane
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit UIS, Malaysia 2024
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Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/116373/7/116373_Performing%20obligatory%20prayer%20while%20hospitalised.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/116373/
https://al-irsyad.uis.edu.my/index.php/alirsyad/article/view/458
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spelling my.iium.irep.1163732025-01-10T03:31:09Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/116373/ Performing obligatory prayer while hospitalised: perspectives of Muslim patients in a teaching hospital in Malaysia Abdul Halim, Ratna Zuhairah Saidi, Sanisah Mohd Yusof, Nazri Che Ahmad, Aminudin Hassan, Nor Haty Susanti, Suryane BL Religion RT Nursing RT85.5 Standards for nursing care. Nursing audit. Evaluation and quality control of nursing care Supporting obligatory prayer for patients has become the focus of the healthcare system in Malaysia since the 1990s. Despite frameworks, guidelines, and facilities for the patients, recent studies have reported the number of patients who perform obligatory prayers at the hospital is still low. The reasons for this are unclear. In understanding the issue, this study explores the challenges of Muslim patients in performing prayer during hospitalisation. Using a qualitative single-embedded case study design, adult Muslims admitted to a teaching hospital on the East Coast of Malaysia for over 24 hours and fluent in Malay or English were recruited. Data were collected between October 2021 and August 2022 through in-depth interviews, observations, and document analysis. The data were analysed using the framework technique facilitated by NVivo software version 12. 18 participants were involved, and several themes emerged: perceptions towards Allah and misconceptions about leniency, feelings of uncleanliness and unsuitability to pray, and insufficient support. Despite being aware of the prayer obligation, patients' misconceptions about leniency led to disengagement from prayer activities. Contribution: The study captures the personal experiences and challenges faced by Muslim patients. It allows a deeper understanding of how hospital environments, personal perceptions, and support systems affect spiritual practices during hospitalisation. While frameworks and guidelines exist to support patients in performing obligatory prayers, this study highlights a critical gap between these provisions and actual patient behaviour. By identifying challenges such as misconceptions about leniency and cleanliness, the study sheds light on previously underexplored reasons for low prayer engagement. Penerbit UIS, Malaysia 2024-12-12 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/116373/7/116373_Performing%20obligatory%20prayer%20while%20hospitalised.pdf Abdul Halim, Ratna Zuhairah and Saidi, Sanisah and Mohd Yusof, Nazri and Che Ahmad, Aminudin and Hassan, Nor Haty and Susanti, Suryane (2024) Performing obligatory prayer while hospitalised: perspectives of Muslim patients in a teaching hospital in Malaysia. Journal of Islamic and Contemporary Issues, 9 (2). pp. 1306-1319. ISSN 0128-116X E-ISSN 2550-1992 https://al-irsyad.uis.edu.my/index.php/alirsyad/article/view/458 10.53840/alirsyad.v9i2.458
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic BL Religion
RT Nursing
RT85.5 Standards for nursing care. Nursing audit. Evaluation and quality control of nursing care
spellingShingle BL Religion
RT Nursing
RT85.5 Standards for nursing care. Nursing audit. Evaluation and quality control of nursing care
Abdul Halim, Ratna Zuhairah
Saidi, Sanisah
Mohd Yusof, Nazri
Che Ahmad, Aminudin
Hassan, Nor Haty
Susanti, Suryane
Performing obligatory prayer while hospitalised: perspectives of Muslim patients in a teaching hospital in Malaysia
description Supporting obligatory prayer for patients has become the focus of the healthcare system in Malaysia since the 1990s. Despite frameworks, guidelines, and facilities for the patients, recent studies have reported the number of patients who perform obligatory prayers at the hospital is still low. The reasons for this are unclear. In understanding the issue, this study explores the challenges of Muslim patients in performing prayer during hospitalisation. Using a qualitative single-embedded case study design, adult Muslims admitted to a teaching hospital on the East Coast of Malaysia for over 24 hours and fluent in Malay or English were recruited. Data were collected between October 2021 and August 2022 through in-depth interviews, observations, and document analysis. The data were analysed using the framework technique facilitated by NVivo software version 12. 18 participants were involved, and several themes emerged: perceptions towards Allah and misconceptions about leniency, feelings of uncleanliness and unsuitability to pray, and insufficient support. Despite being aware of the prayer obligation, patients' misconceptions about leniency led to disengagement from prayer activities. Contribution: The study captures the personal experiences and challenges faced by Muslim patients. It allows a deeper understanding of how hospital environments, personal perceptions, and support systems affect spiritual practices during hospitalisation. While frameworks and guidelines exist to support patients in performing obligatory prayers, this study highlights a critical gap between these provisions and actual patient behaviour. By identifying challenges such as misconceptions about leniency and cleanliness, the study sheds light on previously underexplored reasons for low prayer engagement.
format Article
author Abdul Halim, Ratna Zuhairah
Saidi, Sanisah
Mohd Yusof, Nazri
Che Ahmad, Aminudin
Hassan, Nor Haty
Susanti, Suryane
author_facet Abdul Halim, Ratna Zuhairah
Saidi, Sanisah
Mohd Yusof, Nazri
Che Ahmad, Aminudin
Hassan, Nor Haty
Susanti, Suryane
author_sort Abdul Halim, Ratna Zuhairah
title Performing obligatory prayer while hospitalised: perspectives of Muslim patients in a teaching hospital in Malaysia
title_short Performing obligatory prayer while hospitalised: perspectives of Muslim patients in a teaching hospital in Malaysia
title_full Performing obligatory prayer while hospitalised: perspectives of Muslim patients in a teaching hospital in Malaysia
title_fullStr Performing obligatory prayer while hospitalised: perspectives of Muslim patients in a teaching hospital in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Performing obligatory prayer while hospitalised: perspectives of Muslim patients in a teaching hospital in Malaysia
title_sort performing obligatory prayer while hospitalised: perspectives of muslim patients in a teaching hospital in malaysia
publisher Penerbit UIS, Malaysia
publishDate 2024
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/116373/7/116373_Performing%20obligatory%20prayer%20while%20hospitalised.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/116373/
https://al-irsyad.uis.edu.my/index.php/alirsyad/article/view/458
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score 13.232389