AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how spiritual care interventions impact spiritual well-being, loneliness, hope, and life satisfaction in ICU patients.
  • A total of 64 patients were involved, split into an intervention group receiving specialized spiritual care and a control group receiving standard care.
  • Results showed significant improvements in the intervention group across all measured aspects, suggesting that incorporating spiritual care in ICUs can enhance the overall experience and well-being of patients.

Article Abstract

Background: The intensive care unit is a place where patients try to cope with pain and question the meaning and purpose of life and spiritual needs emerge.

Objective: The present study was conducted to examine the effects of spiritual care interventions on the spiritual well-being, loneliness, hope, and life satisfaction of patients treated in intensive care.

Research Methodology: The study was conducted in an intensive care unit as an interventional study with a randomized pre-test, post-test, and control group between September and December 2021. A total of 64 patients, 32 in the intervention group and 32 in the control group, were included in the sample. The patients in the intervention group received eight sessions (twice a week) of spiritual nursing interventions according to the Traditions-Reconciliation-Understandings-Searching-Teachers model in the intensive care unit, while the control group received routine nursing care.

Results: The mean age of the participants was 63.53 ± 4.10 years in the intervention group and 63.37 ± 3.18 years in the control group. Most of the participants in both the intervention (59.4 %) and control (68.7 %) groups were female. Following the intervention, the findings showed that the intervention had positive effects on patients' spiritual well-being (t = -10.382), loneliness (t = 13.635), hope (t = -10.440), and life satisfaction (t = -10.480) levels (p < 0.001).

Conclusions: It was found that the spiritual care provided in the intensive care unit positively affected patients' spiritual well-being, hope, loneliness, and life satisfaction levels. It can be recommended that nurses working in intensive care develop a spiritually supportive environment by addressing the spiritual issues of patients and their relatives and using existing spiritual care services.

Implications For Clinical Practice: Intensive care nurses should provide an environment and nursing care that meet their patients' spiritual needs. Spiritual care can be given to improve spiritual well-being, hope, and life satisfaction levels and to alleviate loneliness in intensive care patients.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.iccn.2023.103438DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

intensive care
16
care unit
16
control group
16
spiritual well-being
12
life satisfaction
12
intervention group
12
effects spiritual
8
spiritual care
8
well-being loneliness
8
loneliness hope
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!