Perceptions of spiritual care among nurses undertaking postregistration education.

Int J Palliat Nurs

School of Health, Nursing and Midwifery, University of Paisley, Paisley, PA1 2BE, UK.

Published: April 2004

Previous research has suggested that qualified nurses recognize that patients have spiritual needs and consider meeting those needs to be important. However, there is also evidence suggesting that nurses feel ill prepared for, and uncertain about, their role as spiritual care providers. A questionnaire on spiritual care and the nurse's role was distributed to a group of 59 registered nurses (of varying ages and levels of experience) undertaking a palliative care module as part of a post-registration degree programme in Scotland. The findings demonstrated that respondents regarded spiritual care as important, especially for certain patient groups. They also thought nurses had a significant responsibility in spiritual caregiving. Individuals varied in how difficult they found identifying patients in need of spiritual care and in meeting those needs. However, analysis of responses revealed considerable insight into possible signs of patient need, examples of nursing interventions and potential barriers to effective spiritual care. Some areas of relative lack of knowledge were identified and may indicate where future efforts to raise awareness of spiritual care among similar groups of nurses should be concentrated.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/ijpn.2004.10.4.12792DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

spiritual care
28
care
8
spiritual
8
patients spiritual
8
nurses
6
perceptions spiritual
4
care nurses
4
nurses undertaking
4
undertaking postregistration
4
postregistration education
4

Similar Publications

Teaching death, spirituality, and palliative care to university students: Novel pedagogical approach.

Palliat Support Care

January 2025

Department of Theology and Religious Education, College of Liberal Arts, Manila, Philippines.

Teaching death, spirituality, and palliative care equips students with critical skills and perspectives for holistic patient care. This interdisciplinary approach fosters empathy, resilience, and personal growth while enhancing competence in end-of-life care. Using experiential methods like simulations and real patient interactions, educators bridge theory and practice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Degenerative cervical diseases can severely affect patients' quality of life (QOL), mental health, and physical function. While surgical intervention is a common treatment, its impact on holistic well-being, including spiritual health, has not been thoroughly explored. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of surgery on QOL, pain-related disability, mental health, and spiritual well-being in patients with degenerative cervical diseases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Although religious leaders play an important role in providing informal mental health care to individuals struggling to seek religious and spiritual care, existing studies have not explored the magnitude of psychiatric symptoms and motivators to seek mental health services from religious leaders in religious listening centers and mental hospitals. This paper presents preliminary data from a survey aimed at assessing psychiatric symptoms and factors associated with access to spiritual services among 151 individuals at a religious listening center, as well as to determine the pathways of care among 150 patients attending a mental health clinic in conflict zones of the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Method: Three hundred and one participants were screened for psychiatric symptoms and factors motivating access to religious leaders using a semi-structured questionnaire.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Neuropalliative care is an emerging subspecialty of palliative care designed to address the unique supportive care needs of patients with serious neurological illness, including those receiving neurocritical care in intensive care units. Spiritual care is a vital component in the provision of holistic and humanized care to these patients. A chaplain who is specially trained and credentialed in care for those with serious illness is the health care professional responsible for making spiritual assessments and contributes to the plan of care, facilitating decision making, and guiding other clinicians in the provision of generalist spiritual care.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Comparison of the Predictive Role of Spiritual Well-Being and Pain Intensity on Pain Catastrophizing in Acute and Chronic Pain.

Pain Manag Nurs

January 2025

Department of Nursing, Erciyes University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Kayseri, Turkey. Electronic address:

Aim: This study was conducted to compare the predictive effect of spiritual well-being and pain intensity on pain catastrophizing of individuals with acute and chronic pain.

Design: This research is a cross-sectional and comparative study.

Methods: The study included 116 individuals with chronic pain and 111 individuals with acute pain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!