Objective: Spiritual Psychotherapy for Inpatient, Residential, and Intensive Treatment (SPIRIT) is a flexible clinical protocol for delivering spiritually integrated group psychotherapy within acute psychiatric settings. The authors evaluated SPIRIT's feasibility by examining patients' perceptions of its benefits and clinical and spiritual predictors of observed effects associated with this intervention.
Methods: Over a 1-year period, 22 clinicians stationed on 10 clinical units provided SPIRIT to 1,443 self-referred patients with a broad range of demographic, clinical, and spiritual and religious characteristics.
Results: Overall, patients' perceptions of benefit from SPIRIT were not associated with demographic factors. Clinical factors similarly did not predict treatment responses, suggesting that SPIRIT is equally suitable for patients with mood, anxiety, traumatic, substance use, psychotic, feeding or eating, or personality disorders and for patients with high levels of acuity. Patients with high levels of religious belief responded better to treatment, but patients with low levels of spiritual and religious identity also reported significant benefits. Patients responded better to SPIRIT when it was delivered by clinicians who reported not being affiliated with a religion than did patients receiving the SPIRIT intervention through clinicians who reported a religious affiliation.
Conclusions: Results indicate that SPIRIT is feasible in providing spiritually integrated treatment to diverse patients across multiple levels of acute psychiatric care.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.202000331 | DOI Listing |
Intensive Crit Care Nurs
January 2025
Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, Professorship for Spiritual Care and Psychosomatic Health, University Hospital Rechts der Isar, Technical University of Munich, Kaulbachstraße 22a, Munich 80539, Germany.
Objective: In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, a significant number of critical care nurses have left their positions, citing overload, burnout, and moral distress. This scoping review is not just a theoretical exploration but a timely and crucial investigation into the aspects and structures of critical care nursing that can make the job fulfilling and appealing, thereby promoting intrinsic motivation and staff retention.
Methodology: A scoping review of studies reporting on factors that allow critical care nurses to fall back on their intrinsic job motivation.
Psychoanal Rev
December 2024
6170 A1A South, Unit 212, St. Augustine, FL 32080, E-mail:
In this reflection the author examines the question of authenticity in the culture and in his own experience as a historian and psychoanalyst. His vantage points are death and totalism, the nature of facts, and the spiritual and psychological access to truth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Marital Fam Ther
January 2025
Marriage and Family Therapy, School of Psychology, Counseling, and Family Therapy, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois, USA.
Am J Psychiatry
January 2025
Department of Psychiatry, NYU Langone Center for Psychedelic Medicine, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York (Pagni, Zeifman, Mennenga, Carrithers, Goldway, O'Donnell, Ross, Bogenschutz); School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe (Mennenga); Department of Psychology, New York University, New York (Goldway); Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque (Bhatt).
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