Showing posts with label Caroline Petrie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caroline Petrie. Show all posts

Friday, February 06, 2009

NHS Staff Face Sack If They Discuss Religion

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Caroline Petrie fell foul of the system by offering a Christian to prayer to one of her patients. Photo courtesy of The Telegraph

All National Health Service employees risk losing their job if they discuss their religious beliefs with colleagues or patients, The Daily Telegraph has learnt.

Following overwhelming public support for Caroline Petrie, the Christian nurse who was suspended after she offered to pray for an elderly patient, her employers have caved [sic] said she could return to her job.

The row over her treatment has reached the House of Commons, with Sir Patrick Cormack, the Tory MP for South Staffordshire, claiming that her case had highlighted the “utter absurdities” of political correctness.

Although Mrs Petrie was relieved her ordeal was over, fears have been raised that new rules could lead to the dismissal of any health care worker who tries to talk about their faith to others.

A little-noticed document published by the Department of Health last month gives warning that attempts by doctors or nurses to preach to other staff or patients will be treated as harassment or intimidation under disciplinary procedures.

But it does not make clear the limits of acceptable discussion about religion.

Faith groups said the guidelines were so vague that they could mean action could be taken against anyone who talks about their beliefs to fellow workers or patients. >>> By Martin Beckford and Caroline Gammell | Thursday, February 5, 2009

THE TELEGRAPH: Nurse Caroline Petrie: I Will Continue Praying for Patients

The nurse suspended for offering to pray for a patient has vowed not to change because she cannot separate her faith from her profession.

Caroline Petrie, who has been reinstated as a community nurse, said she did not think she would be doing her job properly if she was forbidden from offering spiritual comfort to her patients.

"It is me, it is a natural thing for me to do," she said. "If I am nursing, I would offer prayer to somebody and I am not going to change."

Mrs Petrie, 45, from Weston-super-Mare, was removed from duties last December after asking an elderly patient in Winscombe, Somerset, if she wanted her to pray for her.

Although the 79-year-old woman was not offended, she was "taken aback" by the suggestion and reported the comment to her carer.

Mrs Petrie was subsequently suspended on suspicion of failing to "demonstrate a personal and professional commitment to equality and diversity", while the hospital investigated.

Two months later, after her case appeared in the media, North Somerset Primary Care Trust relented and said she could come back to work, but Mrs Petrie did not know about the decision until she was contacted by The Daily Telegraph.

Yesterday the mother-of-two said she would behave in exactly the same way: "I cannot divide my faith from my nursing care, I have to be the person I want to be. >>> By Caroline Gammell | Friday, February 6, 2009

THE TELEGRAPH: Hospitals Betray Their History by Banishing Prayer

It is ironic that the country which fostered the Christian tradition of nursing chose to suspend a nurse who wished to pray for her patient, says Bishop Nazir-Ali.

Hospitals began in the Eastern part of the Christian Church, inspired by Christ’s example of serving and caring for the poor, the sick and the needy. They spread rapidly to the west and were closely associated with religious orders and their duty to offer hospitality to any in need. The oldest hospital in the land, I believe, is in Rochester and it is called St Bartholomew’s, like its more famous name-sake in London. The names — St Thomas’s, St Richard’s, St Mary’s — betray their origins and quite often these foundations continue to have connections with the Church. How is it, then, that the Christian faith is becoming more and more marginal in the very places that owe their origin to it? Why are chapels being replaced by “multi-faith rooms” and how can it be that a nurse, Caroline Petrie, can be suspended for offering to pray for a patient who could have and did say “no, thank you”. Why did the matter not end there?

Praise be! Mrs Petrie is being allowed to return to work — but are other people vulnerable to the same kind of treatment? People’s personal beliefs and their professional practice are often closely inter-related. Of all professions, nursing is one that is firmly rooted in the Christian tradition. It arose first in the religious orders and although it began to become secularised after the Reformation, its Christian foundations were re-discovered by people like Florence Nightingale: the founder, in many ways, of modern nursing. During a visit to Egypt she studied the work of the Sisters of Charity at Alexandria and also of the order of deaconesses in Germany. Whilst in the Crimea, she is known to have prayed for the soldiers who were her patients. It was her inspiration which led to the training of nurses in a systematic way in this country and she was hugely influential in the increase of Christian medical missions in Africa, Asia and elsewhere. In many parts of the world, these missions pioneered the practice of modern medicine and, especially, the training and use of nurses in hospitals. This debt is widely acknowledged in the countries concerned. How ironic that it is in Britain that a nurse is threatened with the loss of her job for offering to pray for someone who was unwell – especially when it seems that prayer at the beginning of work was routine for nurses in many British hospitals right up to the 1960s and there are numerous prayers available for nurses to use. >>> By Bishop Nazir-Ali | Saturday, February 7, 2009

The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Paperback & Hardback) – Free delivery >>>

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Melanie Phillips: British Police Running from Muslim Demonstrators, a Christian Nurse Facing the Sack for Offering to Pray for a Patient - This Is the Way a Society Dies

MAIL Online: In our allegedly multicultural society, there is one religious group which is apparently not to be afforded equal respect, let alone treated for what it embodies - the foundational creed of this nation. That group is Britain’s Christians.

Somerset community nurse and committed Christian Caroline Petrie has been suspended and faces being sacked and even struck off for offering to say a prayer for an elderly patient. Although startled, the patient - herself a Christian - did not make a complaint and was in no way offended.

Nevertheless Mrs Petrie’s boss wrote to her saying she was required to uphold the reputation of her profession - which apparently means demonstrating ‘a personal and professional commitment to equality and diversity’ and not using her professional status ‘to promote causes that are not related to health’.

Apparently, Mrs Petrie previously received a warning about promoting her faith at work after she offered to give a prayer card to an elderly male patient.

Now there may be a valid point here about professionalism. Offering prayer cards comes close to touting one’s faith, which might well be thought inappropriate on the wards. But even so, one would have thought that a quiet word in the nurse’s ear would have been all that was necessary. Instead, Mrs Petrie was packed off to an ‘equality’ course for some diversity training.

This Orwellian response has now been followed up by the draconian action of suspending her with the possibility of outright dismissal from her job simply because she offered to pray for another patient.

Suspension and dismissal are sanctions to be used for mistreating or neglecting patients. Yet here they are being used against a nurse for offering to bring a patient a form of spiritual solace - which the patient was able easily to refuse and which caused her no problem. Is this not an utterly idiotic over-reaction?

I am a Jew; but when my mother was in the last stages of her terminal illness she was cared for by deeply devout Christian nurses who regularly prayed for her. Far from being offended by this, I was touched and comforted by this signal that they cared so much about her.

Moreover, this is not actually about upholding professionalism in nursing. It is all about foisting upon nursing the sinister and politically correct ‘diversity’ agenda – which means in effect treating Christianity as inherently offensive. >>> Melanie Phillips | Tuesday, February 3, 2009

BNPTube: Metropolitan Police Humiliated at the Hands of Muslim Demonstrators in London

Part 1:


Part 2

The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Paperback & Hardback) – Free delivery >>>

Saturday, January 31, 2009

This Country Is Just a Load of ****! Get a ******* Grip!

This nurse should be helped! Please eMail the authorities on her behalf. SHOWER them with eMails! The supervisor who took this ridiculous, stupid, absurd decision should be SACKED, forthwith and WITHOUT ANY BENEFITS! I'm SAD to say that I am ASHAMED of my country! – ©Mark

THE TELEGRAPH: A nurse has been suspended from her job for offering to pray for an elderly patient's recovery from illness.

Caroline Petrie, a committed Christian, has been accused by her employers of failing to demonstrate a "personal and professional commitment to equality and diversity".

She faces disciplinary action and could lose her job over the incident.

Mrs Petrie, a married mother of two, says she has been left shocked and upset by the action taken against her.

She insists she has never forced her own religious beliefs on anyone but politely inquired if the elderly patient wanted her to pray for her – either in the woman's presence or after the nurse had left the patient's home.

"I simply couldn't believe that I have been suspended over this. I knew I hadn't done anything wrong. All I am trying to do is help my patients, many of whom want me to pray for them," she said.

Mrs Petrie, 45, is a community nurse employed by North Somerset Primary Care Trust to carry out home visits to sick and elderly patients. Nurse Suspended for Offering to Pray for Elderly Patient's Recovery >>> By Andrew Alderson, Chief Reporter | Saturday, January 31, 2009

Please eMail these stupid people in protest. Please let us defend this poor lady and her rights: pals@nsomerset-pct.nhs.uk

Or, if you prefer to write to them, please use the following address:

Waverley House.
Old Church Road,
Clevedon
North Somerset
BS21 6NN

Or, if you prefer to telephone the stupid people:

Telephone : 01275 546770
Fax : 01275 546769

THE TELEGRAPH: God Bless the Nurse Who Offered Prayer

Nurse Petrie should not be censured for offering to pray for a patient, argues George Pitcher.

It used to be said by soldiers that there are no atheists in a foxhole.
Hospital chaplains may be tempted similarly to suggest that there are no atheists on an intensive-care ward.

That is patently untrue. But it is nonetheless the case that patients in the dark places of illness and their families and friends will find a capacity for prayer that they didn’t think they possessed elsewhere.

Medical staff and those who work in pastoral care know this and respond accordingly; while no doctor will invoke the spiritual overtly in his professional service, many doctors will concur with the value of patients being treated spiritually as well as physically. You don’t have to be a holistic crank to recognise that someone at peace spiritually enhances their chances of physical healing.

So it isn’t weird or inappropriate to respond to the suspension of Caroline Petrie, a Christian nurse in Weston-Super-Mare who offered to say a prayer for a 79-year-old patient after a home visit, with sadness or anger. One can’t imagine the godmother of the nursing profession, Florence Nightingale, responding with anything other than those emotions.

Much, of course, depends on the style and manner in which Nurse Petrie offered her prayer. If she told her elderly patient that she must offer her up because she would soon be dead and face the judgment of the Almighty, or that she must accept the Lord Jesus Christ as her saviour or rot in hell for all eternity, then we might reasonably assume that this was unhelpful pastoral support.

But it’s apparent from the testimony of May Phippen, her patient, that Nurse Petrie did nothing of the sort. The nurse’s Christianity may inform her caring ministry, but did not usurp it; Mrs Phippen reports that she did her work of dressing her legs efficiently and quietly and simply asked if Mrs Phippen would like her to pray for her and didn’t pursue the issue when the offer was declined.

For this, Nurse Petrie faces disciplinary action under “equality and diversity regulations” and could even lose her job. That seems an utter nonsense. There will be those who could be offended by the offer of Christian prayer by a nurse but, again, that must be an issue for the discretion of the professional, not a matter for employment law. >>> George Pitcher | Monday, February 2, 2009

The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Paperback & Hardback) – Free delivery >>>