☾ Ramadan Guide 2025

Working in Ramadan:
Your Complete Guide

Ramadan transforms the GCC — understand it, respect it, and make the most of it. For non-Muslim nurses, this is one of the most enriching cultural experiences you will ever have.

1.8B
Muslims globally observe Ramadan
2–3h
GCC working hours reduced by law during Ramadan
30
Days of beautiful community spirit, generosity & charity
Best time to learn about Islamic culture & traditions

Foundation

What is Ramadan?

Ramadan is the ninth month of the Islamic lunar calendar and the holiest month of the year for Muslims worldwide. Understanding its significance will transform your time in the GCC from mere observation into genuine appreciation.

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The Islamic Lunar Calendar

The Islamic calendar (Hijri) is based on lunar cycles, meaning each month begins with the sighting of the new crescent moon. Because the lunar year is approximately 11 days shorter than the Gregorian year, Ramadan moves earlier each year — cycling through all seasons over about 33 years. In some years Ramadan falls in summer (long, hot fasting days); in others, cooler winter months make it easier.

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Significance in Islam

Ramadan commemorates the month during which the Quran (Islam's holy scripture) was first revealed to the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him). It is a time of intense spiritual renewal, self-discipline, gratitude, and closeness to God. Muslims believe the rewards for good deeds are multiplied during this month, inspiring extraordinary generosity and communal solidarity.

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The Five Pillars of Islam

Fasting during Ramadan (Sawm) is the fourth pillar of Islam. The five pillars are the foundational acts of worship that frame Muslim daily life. Understanding them helps nurses provide culturally sensitive care.

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Who is Required to Fast?

All adult Muslims are required to fast during Ramadan. However, exemptions apply to: pregnant women, breastfeeding mothers, those who are ill or on certain medications, elderly individuals, travellers, and children. Exempt individuals may be required to make up missed fasts later or provide Fidya (charitable compensation). Your fasting patients will tell you — always ask respectfully.

What Does Fasting Mean?

During the fasting hours (from Fajr / pre-dawn until Maghrib / sunset), Muslims abstain completely from: food, all drinks including water, smoking and vaping, and intimate relations. The fast is broken at sunset with Iftar, traditionally starting with dates and water, and begins again after the pre-dawn meal Suhoor. In summer GCC months, this can mean 14–16 hours without food or water.

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The Spiritual Dimension

Ramadan is far more than not eating. Muslims increase their prayers (including Taraweeh — special nightly prayers), recitation of the Quran, acts of charity (Zakat and Sadaqah), and community gathering. The last 10 nights are considered the most sacred, with Laylat Al-Qadr (Night of Power) believed to fall on an odd night — particularly the 27th. Many Muslims spend these nights in the mosque in prayer and contemplation.

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Non-Muslim Nurses

Non-Muslims are absolutely not required to fast. However, respectful behaviour is expected in public: avoiding eating, drinking or smoking openly in front of fasting colleagues, patients, and in public spaces. In healthcare settings, nurses are generally permitted to eat and drink in designated staff areas. Think of it as a month-long exercise in cultural sensitivity — it costs nothing and means everything to your colleagues.

The Five Pillars of Islam

Understanding all five pillars will deepen your cultural competence and improve patient communication.

1

Shahada

Declaration of faith — "There is no god but God, and Muhammad is his messenger"

2

Salah

Five daily prayers performed at prescribed times, facing Mecca

3

Zakat

Charitable giving — 2.5% of annual savings distributed to those in need

4

Sawm

Fasting during Ramadan — the pillar you will encounter most in clinical practice

5

Hajj

Pilgrimage to Mecca — required once in a lifetime for those who are able


Legal Entitlement

Ramadan Working Hours in the GCC

All GCC countries legally mandate reduced working hours during Ramadan for all employees — including non-Muslims. This is one of the most important employment rights for nurses to know before Ramadan begins.

Country Normal Weekly Hours Ramadan Daily Reduction Ramadan Daily Hours (approx.) Applies To
🇦🇪 UAE 8 hrs / day −2 hours 6 hrs / day All employees including non-Muslims
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia 8 hrs / day −3 hours 5 hrs / day All employees including non-Muslims
🇶🇦 Qatar 8 hrs / day −2 hours 6 hrs / day All employees including non-Muslims
🇰🇼 Kuwait 8 hrs / day −2 hours 6 hrs / day All employees including non-Muslims
🇧🇭 Bahrain 8 hrs / day −2 hours 6 hrs / day All employees including non-Muslims
🇴🇲 Oman 8 hrs / day −2 hours 6 hrs / day All employees including non-Muslims

Healthcare Worker Exception: In many hospitals and healthcare facilities, nursing staff are often excluded from Ramadan hour reductions due to patient care continuity requirements. Your contract and hospital policy take precedence. Always verify with your HR department before Ramadan. Some hospitals provide compensatory benefits (additional leave, Ramadan allowances) in lieu of reduced hours.

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Pro Tip: Ask your HR department in writing at least two weeks before Ramadan: "Am I entitled to reduced working hours during Ramadan, and if healthcare workers are exempt, what compensation applies?" Knowing your entitlements prevents misunderstandings and demonstrates professional awareness.


Clinical Practice

Clinical Considerations During Ramadan

Ramadan brings unique clinical challenges across all specialties. Being prepared significantly improves patient outcomes and demonstrates the highest standard of culturally competent care.

Diabetic Patients — Highest Risk

Diabetes management during Ramadan is one of the most complex clinical challenges. Key risks include:

  • Hypoglycaemia from extended fasting periods — particularly dangerous in insulin-dependent patients
  • Hyperglycaemia and diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) from large Iftar meals and altered medication timing
  • Dehydration-related complications in warm climates
  • Patients skipping medications to avoid breaking fast

Medication Timing Changes

All fasting patients require medication schedule review. Standard timing is disrupted. Discuss with the physician and pharmacist:

  • Medications prescribed "twice daily" may be shifted to Suhoor and Iftar
  • Sustained-release formulations may be preferable
  • Medications with food-interaction requirements need re-assessment
  • Some patients may prefer IV administration to avoid oral intake

Dialysis Patients

Patients on haemodialysis face complex challenges. Many fasting patients prefer Ramadan dialysis protocols — scheduling sessions around Iftar to minimise fluid and dietary restriction conflicts. Inter-dialytic weight gain often increases due to altered Suhoor/Iftar fluid intake. Nurses should:

  • Know your unit's Ramadan dialysis scheduling policy
  • Counsel on fluid management between Iftar and Suhoor
  • Monitor potassium and phosphate closely — Iftar diets vary

Cardiac Medications

Anticoagulants (warfarin, NOAC agents), antihypertensives, and cardiac medications require careful review. A patient who has changed their eating pattern without informing the team may present with supratherapeutic INR or blood pressure fluctuations. Always confirm fasting status before cardiac medication assessment and document clearly.

IV vs. Oral Medications

Some fasting patients believe oral medications break the fast. While the scholarly consensus is that most oral medications for medical necessity do not break the fast, patients' personal beliefs vary. Some may prefer IV formulations to avoid any doubt. Approach this with sensitivity: respect the patient's belief while ensuring clinical safety. Escalate to the medical team to offer IV alternatives where feasible.

Blood Draws During Fasting

There is scholarly consensus that blood draws do not break the Islamic fast. However, some patients refuse phlebotomy during fasting hours due to personal interpretation. Know your hospital's policy and approach refusals with patience. Offer to schedule routine (non-urgent) bloods for after Iftar. For urgent bloods, sensitively explain the medical necessity — patients can break fast for medical need.

Mental Health Patients

Psychiatric medications often require strict timing with food. Antipsychotics, mood stabilisers, and antidepressants taken without food can cause nausea or reduced absorption. Collaborate with psychiatry to create a Ramadan medication schedule. Additionally, sleep deprivation from Taraweeh prayers can exacerbate some mental health conditions — monitor closely and document.

Post-Taraweeh Fatigue

Taraweeh are special nightly prayers performed after Isha prayer — they can last 1–2 hours or more. Patients who attend nightly (particularly in the final 10 days) may arrive for appointments or procedures with significant sleep debt. Factor this into consent discussions, sedation risk assessments, and post-operative care planning. Ask patients about their Ramadan prayer schedule as part of your assessment.

Emergency Department Peaks

ED workload has distinct Ramadan patterns. Expect surges of:

  • Hypoglycaemia and fainting in the late afternoon (pre-Iftar)
  • Dehydration, especially in outdoor workers and summer Ramadans
  • Acute cardiac events and GI distress 1–2 hours after Iftar (large meal)
  • Road traffic accidents — elevated post-Iftar (driving while fatigued or distracted)
  • Pre-dawn Suhoor choking, aspiration, and rushed-meal incidents

Clinical Pearl: Before every medication round during Ramadan, ask: "Are you fasting today?" This single question prevents medication errors, guides timing adjustments, and signals to your patients that you understand and respect their faith. Make it as automatic as checking the patient's armband.


Nursing Practice

Fasting Patients — Nursing Protocol

A structured approach to caring for fasting patients during Ramadan demonstrates clinical excellence and cultural competence. These protocols should be applied consistently throughout the month.

Step 1

Always Ask First

Begin every medication pass and assessment with: "Are you fasting today?" Document the patient's fasting status in the nursing notes. This is your single most important Ramadan clinical habit. A patient may fast on some days but not others — do not assume from yesterday's status.

Step 2

Know the High-Risk Medications

Key medications requiring Ramadan timing review:

Metformin — must be taken with food; risk of GI upset and lactic acidosis if taken fasting.
Insulin — timing and dose adjustment essential; hypoglycaemia risk dramatically elevated.
Anticoagulants — dietary changes affect INR; increased monitoring required.
Antiepileptics — missed or delayed doses can trigger breakthrough seizures.
Corticosteroids — taken without food may worsen GI symptoms.

Step 3

Timing Alternatives

Work with the pharmacist and physician to shift medication times to the eating window: medications prescribed with meals are typically moved to Suhoor (pre-dawn meal, before Fajr prayer) or Iftar (sunset meal). For twice-daily medications, consider: Suhoor dose and Iftar dose. Always confirm the revised schedule is written in the medication chart and communicated to the patient clearly.

Step 4

Patient Education

Educate fasting patients clearly and without judgment: explain which medications are safe to take during fasting hours (most), which require food (flag these specifically), and that Islamic scholars generally agree that medications taken for medical necessity do not break the fast. Refer patients to hospital chaplaincy or Islamic advisory services if they need religious reassurance.

Step 5

Documentation

Document fasting status clearly in nursing notes at each medication pass. Include: whether the patient is fasting that day, any medication timing adjustments made, patient education provided, and any refusals. Clear documentation protects both the patient and the nurse and enables continuity of care across all shifts.

Emergency

When Fasting Must Be Broken

In a medical emergency or where fasting poses a significant risk, remind patients sensitively that Islam permits — and often requires — breaking the fast for medical necessity. The Arabic phrase Darura refers to necessity; Islamic law permits what is otherwise prohibited when necessity demands. Frame it positively: "You can make up this fast after Ramadan. Your health must come first." Never shame or pressure — always reassure with compassion.

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Resource: The IDF (International Diabetes Federation) and DAR (Diabetes and Ramadan) International Alliance publish clinical guidelines specifically for diabetic patients fasting during Ramadan. Ask your ward educator or clinical pharmacist for access to the most current Ramadan diabetes management protocol used in your hospital.


Cultural Etiquette

Being a Non-Muslim Nurse During Ramadan

Navigating Ramadan as a non-Muslim nurse is straightforward once you understand the key etiquette. The goal is respectful coexistence — not perfect mimicry. Your colleagues will deeply appreciate your awareness and effort.

Food & Drink

🍴 Eating in Private Only

During Ramadan, eating and drinking in front of fasting colleagues or patients is considered disrespectful. This includes water, coffee, and snacks. Confine all eating and drinking to designated private areas — staff rooms, break rooms, and staff canteens. Many hospitals have signage directing non-fasting staff. It takes minimal effort and means a great deal to your fasting colleagues.

Designated Spaces

📍 Know Your Break Areas

On your first week of Ramadan, identify the designated eating areas in your facility. Ask your charge nurse if unsure. In most GCC hospitals, non-fasting staff have clearly allocated dining and rest areas. Public corridors, nurses' stations, and patient areas are not appropriate for eating or open beverages during fasting hours.

Smoking & Gum

🚬 Public Restraint

Chewing gum and smoking in public during Ramadan is socially inappropriate and in some countries (particularly Saudi Arabia and UAE) may attract social censure. Confine smoking to designated smoking areas and avoid chewing gum visibly in front of fasting colleagues. These are small adjustments with a large positive impact on your relationships at work.

Dress Code

👔 Dress More Conservatively

Ramadan calls for a more conservative dress code even for non-Muslims — covering arms and legs when outside healthcare uniform contexts. In the hospital, your standard uniform is typically fine. Outside work, opt for longer sleeves, trousers or longer skirts, and avoid revealing necklines. This is respected as a sign of cultural solidarity and is especially appreciated in more conservative countries like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.

Language

💬 Ramadan Greetings

Use the appropriate greeting with Muslim colleagues and patients throughout the month. Two phrases are used interchangeably across the GCC. Even a slightly imperfect pronunciation is warmly received — your colleagues will be delighted that you tried.

Social Invitation

🆋 Iftar Invitations

If a Muslim colleague, neighbour, or patient's family invites you to Iftar, accept with genuine enthusiasm — this is a great honour. Iftar invitations are one of the most beautiful social expressions of Ramadan. You will be warmly welcomed, generously fed, and gain an irreplaceable cultural experience. Saying yes costs nothing and gains you a deeper human connection than almost anything else in your GCC experience.

Ramadan Greetings

Both greetings are used across the GCC. Use either — your colleagues will be genuinely touched.

رمضان كريم
Ramadan Kareem
"Generous Ramadan" — wishing someone a bountiful month
Pronounced: Ra-ma-DHAN Ka-REEM
رمضان مبارك
Ramadan Mubarak
"Blessed Ramadan" — the most widely used greeting across the GCC
Pronounced: Ra-ma-DHAN Moo-BA-rak
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Response to Ramadan Kareem / Mubarak: When someone wishes you Ramadan Kareem, you can respond with "Kareem" or "Allaah Akram" (God is more generous). For Ramadan Mubarak, respond with "Mubarak Alayk / Alayki" (blessed upon you — masculine/feminine). But honestly? Simply saying "Thank you, Ramadan Mubarak to you too" is completely fine and warmly appreciated.


Cultural Enrichment

Participating in Ramadan Positively

Ramadan is not something you simply tolerate — it is something you can genuinely participate in and enjoy. Non-Muslim nurses who embrace Ramadan often describe it as one of the highlights of their GCC experience.

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Attending Iftar

The breaking of the fast at sunset is one of the most joyful, communal moments in the Islamic calendar. Hospital Iftar gatherings for all staff (Muslim and non-Muslim) are common. Neighbour and colleague invitations are offered generously. When you attend, you will typically experience: dates and water first (the traditional way to break fast), then soup (often Harees or lentil soup), then the main meal. It is a deeply warm, generous occasion.

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Iftar Table Etiquette

A few tips for a graceful Iftar experience: eat with your right hand (this is Islamic etiquette and deeply appreciated when observed by guests); accept food offered to you — declining repeatedly can feel like a slight; do not criticise the food even if something is unfamiliar; say "Bismillah" (in the name of God) before eating if you like — hosts will be delighted; after the meal, a simple "Shukran" (thank you) or "It was delicious" goes a long way.

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Charity and Giving

Charity is at the heart of Ramadan. Many hospitals and nursing communities organise Iftar food distribution for workers, the less fortunate, or specific communities. Joining these initiatives, even as a volunteer helper, is a deeply meaningful way to participate. Your colleagues will see you as a true member of the community, not just a foreign worker.

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Taraweeh Prayer as Observer

If you are curious about Islamic worship, you may attend Taraweeh prayers at a mosque as a respectful observer — many mosques in the GCC welcome non-Muslim visitors, especially women's sections. Dress modestly (cover hair, arms, legs), sit quietly at the back, and observe in silence. This is completely optional but can be a profound cultural experience. Always ask a Muslim friend first if a particular mosque is visitor-friendly.

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Ramadan Shopping Season

Ramadan is one of the biggest shopping seasons in the GCC. Malls open late (often until 2–3am), incredible deals are available across electronics, fashion, and home goods, and Ramadan pop-up markets offer traditional foods, dates, lanterns, and crafts. If you are working day shifts, your evenings during Ramadan can be wonderfully lively. Many nurses do their annual big purchases during Ramadan sales.

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Entertainment During Ramadan

The entertainment landscape has changed significantly. Saudi Arabia and the UAE now feature concerts, comedy shows, cultural events, and festival performances during Ramadan — though these are typically held after Iftar. Abu Dhabi and Dubai's Ramadan tents host both traditional and contemporary entertainment. Riyadh's entertainment authority runs packed programmes. Check your city's entertainment calendar at the start of Ramadan.


Shift Planning

Ramadan Nursing Schedule

Ramadan fundamentally alters the rhythm of GCC society — and this directly impacts hospital activity patterns, staffing demands, and your personal schedule management.

03:00 – 04:00

Suhoor Time — Pre-dawn activity

Patients wake for the pre-dawn meal. Call light usage increases significantly. Fasting diabetic patients who under-ate at Suhoor may present with pre-Fajr hypoglycaemia. Night shift nurses should anticipate a busy 60-minute window.

04:30 – 06:00

Fajr Prayer — Fasting begins

The pre-dawn prayer marks the start of the fast. Many patients will pray and then try to sleep. Ward activity drops sharply. Night shift nurses often find this the quietest period — but remain vigilant for dehydration symptoms in high-risk patients.

06:00 – 14:00

Morning Hours — Productive fasting window

The earlier morning hours are relatively comfortable for fasting patients. Schedule elective procedures, wound care, physiotherapy, and patient education sessions in the morning where possible — patients are typically more alert and cooperative before midday fatigue sets in.

14:00 – 18:00

Late Afternoon — Highest clinical risk window

This is the most clinically challenging period of Ramadan. Patients have been fasting 12–14+ hours. Hypoglycaemia presentations peak, dehydration risk is highest, and fatigue is significant. ED will be busier. Increase monitoring frequency for diabetic and cardiac patients in this window.

18:00 – 20:00

Maghrib Prayer — Iftar / Fast breaks

The sunset prayer signals Iftar — the fast is broken. There is an immediate surge of energy and relief across the ward. Patients will eat (often enthusiastically). The post-Iftar period brings new clinical concerns: acute gastric distress, cardiac events from large meals, and blood sugar spikes in diabetics. Remain alert in the 1–2 hours after Iftar.

20:00 – 23:00

Taraweeh Prayer — Nocturnal activity peaks

Much of the GCC is awake and active after Iftar. Society becomes genuinely nocturnal. For nurses, this means night shift demand increases significantly during Ramadan — patients are awake, visitors come late, ward activity continues well past midnight. Night shift nurses often find Ramadan their busiest month.

Personal tip

Managing Your Own Energy

If you are non-fasting, maintain your normal meal schedule in private areas. Prioritise sleep — the nocturnal energy of Ramadan is infectious but will exhaust you if unmanaged. Many nurses find it helpful to shift their social activities later in the evening to align with the Ramadan rhythm. Stay hydrated and keep healthy snacks in your locker for your break.


After Ramadan

Eid Al-Fitr — The Festival of Breaking the Fast

Eid Al-Fitr marks the end of Ramadan with joyful celebration across the GCC. For nurses, it brings important practical implications around public holidays, leave planning, and hospital staffing.

What is Eid Al-Fitr?

Eid Al-Fitr (Arabic: عيد الفطر) means "Festival of Breaking the Fast." It is celebrated on the first day of Shawwal, the month following Ramadan. It begins with the sighting of the new moon and is one of the two major Islamic festivals. The day starts with a special congregational Eid prayer, followed by visiting family, exchanging gifts, wearing new clothes, and sharing special meals.

Public Holiday Duration

Eid Al-Fitr is a 3-day public holiday across all GCC countries, though this is often extended by government decree to 4–5 days. In some years it aligns with a weekend, creating extended breaks of 7+ days. Exact dates are confirmed only upon moon sighting — official announcements typically come the evening before Eid. Plan for variability in your leave requests.

Eidiya — Festival Giving

A beautiful Eid tradition is Eidiya — gifts of money given by adults to children and younger family members. Many GCC nationals give Eidiya to all children they encounter, including the children of foreign staff. If children of your colleagues are at the hospital during Eid, the gift of a small amount of cash (wrapped in a special Eid envelope) is warmly received and culturally meaningful.

Leave Competition Around Eid

Eid Al-Fitr is the most competitive annual leave period in GCC healthcare. Both Muslim and non-Muslim staff seek leave to travel or celebrate. Submit your leave request early — several weeks in advance where possible. Many hospitals operate a fair rotation system, with Muslim staff having priority for Eid but non-Muslim staff potentially receiving equivalent priority for their own religious holidays (Christmas, Easter, Diwali, etc.).

Hospital Staffing During Eid

Healthcare facilities operate on skeleton staff during Eid. Those who work during Eid typically receive enhanced pay (1.5x–2x daily rate) or additional compensatory leave. Working Eid can be financially beneficial and is often quieter in elective specialties — though emergency departments and acute wards remain fully operational. Ask your manager about the Eid staffing incentive package.

Post-Ramadan Adjustment

After Eid, the GCC takes a week or two to return to its normal rhythm. Sleep schedules, eating patterns, and social activity normalise gradually. Patients with chronic conditions — particularly diabetics — may need post-Ramadan medication review. Some patients develop post-Ramadan hypoglycaemia as their eating patterns suddenly change back. Weight changes during Ramadan (both loss and gain) may affect drug dosing.

عيد مبارك
Eid Mubarak
"Blessed Eid" — the most common Eid greeting across the GCC
Pronounced: Eed Moo-BA-rak
عيد سعيد
Eid Saeed
"Happy Eid" — used widely alongside Eid Mubarak
Pronounced: Eed Sa-EED

Awareness

Common Mistakes Non-Muslim Nurses Make

These mistakes are made with no ill intent — usually from simple unawareness. Understanding them before Ramadan begins puts you ahead of the curve and protects your relationships with colleagues, patients, and the community.

1

Eating or Drinking in Front of Fasting Colleagues

The most common and most easily avoided mistake. Even a bottle of water at the nursing station during fasting hours is noticed and felt. Move all eating and drinking to designated private areas throughout Ramadan.

Fix: Break room only during fasting hours
2

Forgetting to Ask Fasting Status Before Medication

Administering medications without confirming fasting status is the most clinically significant Ramadan error. A patient who is fasting needs a different medication schedule. "Are you fasting today?" — every single medication pass, every single day.

Fix: Add fasting status to medication round checklist
3

Mispronouncing or Avoiding Ramadan Greetings

Some nurses avoid saying "Ramadan Mubarak" because they fear mispronouncing it. Your Muslim colleagues would much rather hear a warm attempt than silence. A slightly imperfect pronunciation accompanied by a genuine smile is received with absolute warmth.

Fix: Practise once — Ra-ma-DHAN Moo-BA-rak
4

Scheduling Procedures During Prayer Times

Scheduling non-urgent procedures, transfers, or assessments during the five daily prayer times — particularly Dhuhr (midday) and Maghrib (sunset Iftar) — creates unnecessary friction. If it can wait 15–20 minutes, let it wait. Ask your Muslim colleagues what the current prayer times are at the start of Ramadan.

Fix: Note prayer times on the unit whiteboard
5

Being Dismissive of Reduced Working Hours

Some nurses (particularly those excluded from hour reductions) express frustration openly when Muslim colleagues leave earlier. This damages trust significantly. If you have concerns about staffing, raise them professionally with management — not through comments directed at observant staff.

Fix: Raise staffing concerns with management, not peers
6

Not Knowing Laylat Al-Qadr Significance

Laylat Al-Qadr (Night of Power) falls in the last 10 days of Ramadan — believed to be on an odd night, most often the 27th. Many Muslims will not sleep during this night and may come to work sleep-deprived the following day. Awareness of this avoids insensitive comments about tired colleagues.

Fix: Note the final 10 days of Ramadan in your calendar
7

Assuming All Muslims Fast the Same Way

Fasting practice varies. Some patients fast strictly, others are medically exempt, some fast on certain days only. Never assume a patient's fasting status from their religion or appearance. Always ask directly and without judgment.

Fix: Ask, never assume
8

Declining Every Iftar Invitation

Repeatedly declining Iftar invitations — even with polite excuses — can be perceived as a rejection of hospitality and cultural connection. You do not need to attend every invitation, but accepting at least one or two during Ramadan will genuinely transform your relationships at work.

Fix: Say yes to at least one Iftar this Ramadan

Preparation

Ramadan Preparation Checklist

Use this checklist to prepare before Ramadan begins. Your progress is saved automatically in your browser.

Your Ramadan readiness 0 / 10 complete
Know this year's Ramadan dates — check official GCC government announcements or Islamic calendar apps
Prepare medication timing protocols for fasting patients — discuss with pharmacist and ward physician
Stock up on private snacks and drinks for the staff break room — so you can eat comfortably away from fasting colleagues
Learn the Ramadan greetings — practise "Ramadan Kareem" and "Ramadan Mubarak" until they feel natural
Ask HR about reduced working hours entitlement — confirm in writing before Ramadan starts
Review diabetic patient management during Ramadan — access the IDF Ramadan Diabetes Guidelines for your unit
Accept any Iftar invitation you receive this Ramadan — make a genuine effort to attend at least one
Dress more conservatively during Ramadan — cover arms and legs in public outside the hospital uniform
Review dialysis patient Ramadan scheduling protocol — know your unit's policy before the month begins
Ask fasting status at every medication round — make it as automatic as the patient ID check

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

The questions non-Muslim nurses ask most often about Ramadan — answered honestly and practically.

No — non-Muslims are not required to fast or follow religious restrictions. However, you are expected to observe basic public decency norms: not eating or drinking openly in front of fasting colleagues and patients, dressing more conservatively, and avoiding smoking in public. These are not legal obligations (except in some public spaces in Saudi Arabia) but they are strong social expectations. Think of them as workplace etiquette rather than religious requirements — the same way you would behave respectfully at any cultural event that is not your own.
Yes — in designated private areas such as the staff room, break room, and staff canteen. Water dispensers and kitchen facilities in private staff areas remain in use throughout Ramadan. What is not appropriate is drinking water or any beverage at the nurses' station, in patient corridors, or in front of fasting patients and colleagues. Carry a closed water bottle in your bag if you need to stay hydrated during ward rounds — just do not drink it openly in front of fasting staff. Some hospitals clearly mark designated eating areas — use them.
It depends on your country, hospital, and employment contract. By law, all GCC countries mandate a 2–3 hour reduction per day during Ramadan for all employees, including non-Muslims. However, healthcare workers are frequently excluded from this entitlement due to patient care requirements — your hospital's specific HR policy governs this, and it should be stated in your contract or the hospital's Ramadan policy circular. Many hospitals offer compensatory benefits in lieu of reduced hours (additional leave days, Ramadan bonuses, or flexible scheduling). Always ask HR in writing before Ramadan starts.
This requires a team approach — and respect for patient autonomy. Most Islamic scholars permit (and many encourage) diabetic patients to seek a medical dispensation from fasting. However, patients have the right to fast if they choose. Your role as a nurse is to:
  • Increase monitoring frequency (blood glucose checks at minimum 3x daily)
  • Collaborate with the physician and pharmacist to adjust medication timing and dosing
  • Educate the patient on hypoglycaemia recognition and when to break the fast
  • Establish a clear "break fast" threshold — e.g., blood glucose below 4.0 mmol/L
  • Document your education and the patient's informed decision clearly
The patient can break their fast for medical necessity without sin — reassure them of this sensitively.
"Ramadan Mubarak" or "Ramadan Kareem" are the two main greetings — use either at the start of Ramadan and throughout the month. At Eid, say "Eid Mubarak" or "Eid Saeed." If a fasting patient or colleague expresses hunger or tiredness during the day, a simple compassionate acknowledgement — "I know it's a long day, well done for keeping your fast" — is deeply appreciated. Avoid questions like "How can you do it?" which can come across as dismissive, and instead express genuine admiration: "I respect how committed you are to this."
Yes — Eid Al-Fitr is a public holiday in all six GCC countries. The standard entitlement is 3 days, but it is commonly extended to 4–5 days by government decree. The exact start date depends on the moon sighting and is typically announced the evening before Eid — meaning you may get as little as 24 hours' notice. Leave requests around Eid are the most competitive of the year in healthcare settings, so submit yours well in advance. Healthcare services remain operational throughout Eid with skeleton staffing.
A genuine, immediate apology is all that is needed. Something like "I'm so sorry, I completely forgot — please excuse me" is received with warmth and forgiveness in virtually every case. GCC Muslims understand that non-Muslims are not required to fast and most are not offended by an honest mistake followed by a sincere apology. What matters far more than the occasional slip is your consistent effort throughout the month to be respectful. No one expects perfection — they expect genuine care and respect.
With respect, thorough education, and clear documentation. A mentally competent adult patient has the right to make decisions about their own care — including the decision to fast despite medical risk. Your professional obligations are:
  • Provide full, clear information about the medical risks of fasting in their condition
  • Explain that Islamic scholars generally permit breaking the fast for medical necessity
  • Refer to the hospital chaplain or Islamic affairs department if available
  • Modify management where possible to support safer fasting (adjusted medications, increased monitoring)
  • Document clearly that the patient was informed of risks and made an informed, autonomous decision
  • Establish clear clinical thresholds at which the patient agrees to break their fast
Never coerce or repeatedly pressure a patient who has made an informed decision. Respect and safety are not mutually exclusive.