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Mediating worlds: the role of nurses as ritual specialists in caring for the dead and dying

  • Lindsey Buster
  • , Karina Croucher
  • , Christina Faull

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Rituals are central to the everyday life of the nurse, yet the fundamental roles that rituals play in caring for the dead and dying has often been neglected. This paper explores modern palliative and post-mortem care – its practices, practitioners and arenas – against the background of long-held, global concerns regarding the dead and dying. Comparison with the archaeological and ethnographic records demonstrates©the ubiquitous and enduring practices surrounding death, and the centrality of ritual specialists to this complex social and biological process. This deep-time perspective highlights the importance of nurses, and their associated nursing rituals, in the transition of patients between life and death, and the difficult journeys that nurse, patient and family undertake in this mediation between worlds. Such a perspective not only empowers nurses in their daily practices, and places nursing rituals firmly at the centre of modern palliative care work, but demonstrates the value of archaeology and ethnography in contextualising the challenges of today.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)554-571
    JournalMortality
    Volume29
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 17 Apr 2023

    Keywords

    • Archaeology
    • Death
    • Nursing
    • Palliative care
    • Rite of passage
    • Ritual specialist

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