AI Article Synopsis

  • Brazilian culture is deeply religious, yet incorporating spirituality into palliative care remains challenging for healthcare professionals.
  • A study involving 50 family members of palliative care patients assessed various spiritual resources and revealed a high prevalence of positive spiritual/religious coping (76%).
  • Significant correlations were found, such as a strong link between positive coping and centrality of religiosity, and moderate correlations involving attachment to God and the presence of spiritual struggles.
  • The research highlights the need for healthcare teams to acknowledge and utilize these spiritual resources in palliative care to enhance patient and family support.

Article Abstract

Although religiosity is a strong feature of Brazilian people, the integration of spirituality in palliative care (PC) has been a challenge for health care professionals. In order to evaluate the spiritual resources used by family members of patients in PC, this work presents the results of the research carried out with 50 family members. The Satisfaction with Life Scale, Centrality of Religiosity Scale, Spiritual/Religious Coping Scale, Religious and Spiritual Struggles Scale, and Attachment to God Inventory were applied. The prevalence of positive spiritual/religious coping was very high (76%) or high (6%). There was a strong correlation between positive spiritual/religious coping and centrality of religiosity ( = 0.805; SD = 0.87). There was a moderate negative correlation between the avoidant attachment to God and centrality of religiosity ( = -0.611; SD = 1.24) and positive spiritual/religious coping ( = -0.575; SD = 1.37). There was a moderate positive correlation between the anxious attachment to God and spiritual struggles ( = 0.515; SD = 0.76) and negative spiritual/religious coping ( = 0.555; SD = 0.616). These results suggest that spiritual/religious resources are present in family members of patients in PC. These resources have been mostly ignored by the multidisciplinary team. Findings provide an evidence base for training health care professionals to better integrate spirituality in PC settings.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08854726.2021.1993120DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

spiritual/religious coping
20
family members
16
resources family
12
members patients
12
centrality religiosity
12
attachment god
12
positive spiritual/religious
12
spiritual resources
8
palliative care
8
health care
8

Similar Publications

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!