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AIAN Religious and Sacred Beliefs. Religious Artifacts. Include items such as totem bags, tobacco, hair, pipes, necklaces, bracelets, as well as feathers, beads, etc. When in hospital, the patient may need these items near the bed.
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Religious Artifacts • Include items such as totem bags, tobacco, hair, pipes, necklaces, bracelets, as well as feathers, beads, etc. • When in hospital, the patient may need these items near the bed. • Hospital staff may consider these to be “dirty” or “unsanitary” and discard them • Some items cannot be touched by anyone other than the patient or healer
Religious Artifacts (cont.) • Hospital Nurse provided solution to having artifacts or religious articles with the patient: • Put the article in sterile bag • Betadine® patients outer thigh on muscle tissue • Use sterile surgical tape to tape the bag on the Betadine® area of skin
Examples of Religious Items • Avoid using sacred colors • These vary by tribe so you need to ask • NOTE: red is sacred and is reserved for specific uses by several tribal Nations. Yellow by others • Be careful about using clip art or Native symbols as some are sacred • Owls often are viewed as omens of death by some tribes
Religious Items (cont.) • Unfortunately some hospitals and public buildings adopted surveillance systems that use owls. Some Natives will not enter such buildings. • Need to identify at least one entrance without an owl and use it in your directions for Natives.
Religious Variability • Peyote and Traditional Church is only available in a few regions of the country. • Very strict protocols • Peyote never taken without healer’s supervision in the sacred setting • Many tribes practice organized religion (historically forced to or would not be given food or blankets by Missionaries, etc.
Religious Diversity • Even among those tribal Nations that use organized religious practices, many individuals in the tribe continue to also practice traditional Indian medicine. • The combination of organized and traditional Indian medicine is fairly common(see Burhansstipanov L and Hollow W. Native American Cultural Aspects of Nursing Oncology Care. eds. Marlene Z. Cohen Seminars in Oncology Nursing: 2001: 17: 3: 206-219.)
Religion and Tobacco • Tobacco is revered in most American Indian cultures • Traditional ceremonies use tobacco • The smoke is used to honor and show respect for the Creator and to ask for His attention to our prayers or ceremony • Tobacco is grown specifically for ceremonies, but when it is not available, manufactured tobacco is used
Religion and Tobacco (cont.) • Ceremonial use lacks the dosage, frequency and duration to be considered as addictive tobacco use • Education messages need to distinguish between ceremonial and habitual / addictive tobacco use • Currently no Quit-lines or other cessation programs sensitively address Native use