Publications by authors named "Melissa Lanza"

This descriptive qualitative study was conducted to explicate pastoral care providers' perceptions of nurses as spiritual providers. Spirituality is especially meaningful in contemporary society as a whole with spiritual care an expectation of hospitalized patients. Spiritual care given by nurses is grounded in nursing's history, inherent in its philosophical framework, and supported by research and professional mandates.

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This qualitative study explored patients' perceptions of spirituality and of the nurse as a spiritual care provider. Semistructured interviews were conducted with 8 adults older than 21, who were living at home, and had been discharged from the hospital within the past 3 months having had at least a 5-day length of stay. Participants agreed that during their hospitalization, nurses were kind and caring but these behaviors were not perceived as spiritual care.

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Purpose: To describe the spiritual care activities of nurses as subsequently identified in the Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC) labels.

Methods: Data were taken from a larger study that used a multiple triangulation research design to describe spiritual perspectives, interventions, and attitudes of 1,000 Sigma Theta Tau International members. Data analysis included descriptive and multivariate statistics for quantitative items, and content analysis for responses to questions.

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Prayer can be empowering for performance enhancement. Researchers drew conclusions from a larger study that employed triangulation of research methods and a random sample of 1000 nurses to describe spiritual perspectives, interventions, and attitudes of nurses in the United States. This article describes the nurses' prayerful activities.

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