• J Gen Intern Med · Sep 2024

    Muslim Patients' Religious & Spiritual Resource Needs in US Hospitals: Findings from a National Survey.

    • Ummesalmah Abdulbaseer, Natasha Piracha, Mohamed Hamouda, Iman Farajallah, Samsiah Abdul-Majid, Shareif Abdelwahab, Warren K Teltser, and Aasim I Padela.
    • Initiative On Islam and Medicine, Brookfield, WI, USA.
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2024 Sep 23.

    BackgroundHealthcare provided without attending to patients' religious/spiritual needs contributes to inequities.ObjectiveAssess Muslim American views on the importance and accessibility of religious/spiritual resources in hospitals.Design/Participants/Main MeasuresA survey was distributed at community events and online to self-reported Muslim adults. It contained measures of religiosity, importance and availability of specific religious/spiritual resources, and conventional sociodemographic descriptors. Analyses utilized chi-squared tests and regression models to test associations between participant characteristics and views on the importance and availability of religious/spiritual resources in hospitals.Key ResultsOf the 1281 respondents, many (68%; n = 875) were women, and South Asian (39%; n = 492) or Arab (37%; n = 469). Almost all (95%; n = 1203) noted it was important to have their religious/spiritual needs met in the hospital. The most important resources were halal food (93%; n = 1188), a neutral prayer space (93%; n = 1188), and medications without pork or alcohol (92%; n = 1177), yet a minority found such resources available; halal food (17%; n = 111), prayer space (26%; n = 169), and medication without pork or alcohol (9.3%; n = 59). Almost all (92%, N = 1180) felt comfortable identifying as Muslim in the hospital, yet few (27%, N = 173) were asked. Participants with higher positive religious coping placed greater importance on religious/spiritual needs being met (OR 1.15, p < .05). Those regularly attending congregational prayer services (β 0.2, p < 0.001), with more positive religious coping (β 0.11, p < 0.001), for whom Islam informed their whole approach to life (β 0.34, p < 0.001), and those with greater perceived discrimination in medical settings (β 0.03, p < 0.022) placed greater importance on the availability of Islamic resources in hospital. Those asked about religious affiliation (OR 2.23, p < 0.01) had higher odds of believing their religious/spiritual needs were met.ConclusionsMuslim Americans have substantial unmet religious/spiritual resource needs in hospital settings. Patient-centered, equitable care may be enhanced by clinicians inquiring about, and mobilizing resources to attend to these.© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Society of General Internal Medicine.

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