AI Article Synopsis

  • The review analyzes research on religious and spiritual factors in oncology nursing published between 1990-1999, highlighting a higher prevalence of qualitative studies (27%) compared to quantitative ones (14%).
  • Findings indicated that religion and spirituality were central themes in qualitative research even when not the primary focus, and they served as key variables in quantitative studies concerning patients' needs and quality of life.
  • The study concludes that oncology nursing research is more likely to explore these dimensions than other nursing fields, emphasizing the importance of integrating diverse research methods and clearly distinguishing between religious and spiritual needs in future studies.

Article Abstract

Purpose/objectives: To review qualitative and quantitative research studies measuring religious and spiritual variables published in American oncology nursing journals from 1990-1999 and the types of measures used.

Data Sources: All research studies published from 1990-1999 in Oncology Nursing Forum, Cancer Nursing, and the Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing.

Data Synthesis: A higher percentage of qualitative (27%) than quantitative (14%) oncology nursing studies reported findings on religious and spiritual variables. Religion or spirituality was the major focus of 14% of qualitative studies, and these concepts emerged in qualitative studies even when they were not a study's research focus. Religion or spirituality was the primary independent or dependent variable in 10% of quantitative studies and was a prominent measure in quantitative studies on patients' needs, coping, and quality of life.

Conclusions: Nursing researchers in oncology are more likely to study issues relating to religion and spirituality than researchers in other fields of nursing, and substantially more research on these topics has been reported in oncology nursing than in the research literature on psychology or various fields of medicine.

Implications For Nursing: Implications include the value of (a) combining qualitative and quantitative methods in a single study, (b) incorporating demographic measures, such as religious denomination, as independent variables in analyses, (c) using separate and multiple measures of religion and spirituality in research, and (d) differentiating between religious and spiritual needs in research and practice.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1188/02.ONF.679-685DOI Listing

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