Results 261 to 270 of about 1,426,784 (316)
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Spirituality and spiritual distress in neurologic illness
2023Neurologic illnesses present multiple challenges to patients and their families from the time of initial diagnosis and throughout their illness trajectory, including challenges related to accepting the diagnosis and its various impacts and anxiety about future living with their illness.
Rena, Arshinoff +2 more
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Journal of Clinical Psychology, 2010
AbstractMany clients highly value religious and spiritual (R/S) commitments, and many psychotherapists have accommodated secular treatments to R/S perspectives. We meta‐analyzed 51 samples from 46 studies (N = 3,290) that examined the outcomes of religious accommodative therapies and nonreligious spirituality therapies. Comparisons on psychological and
Everett L, Worthington +3 more
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AbstractMany clients highly value religious and spiritual (R/S) commitments, and many psychotherapists have accommodated secular treatments to R/S perspectives. We meta‐analyzed 51 samples from 46 studies (N = 3,290) that examined the outcomes of religious accommodative therapies and nonreligious spirituality therapies. Comparisons on psychological and
Everett L, Worthington +3 more
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Journal of Religion and Health, 2022
This study was undertaken to test the validity of the Spirituality and Spiritual Care Rating Scale (SSCRS) by McSherry et al. (IJNS 39:723-734, 2002) in an Indian context. The study was conducted in a tertiary care teaching hospital with a convenience sample of 200 nurses.
Nelson Dheeraj Pais +2 more
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This study was undertaken to test the validity of the Spirituality and Spiritual Care Rating Scale (SSCRS) by McSherry et al. (IJNS 39:723-734, 2002) in an Indian context. The study was conducted in a tertiary care teaching hospital with a convenience sample of 200 nurses.
Nelson Dheeraj Pais +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
The Hospice Journal, 1999
At the present time, there is a widening search for spirituality as distinct from organized religion, particularly as it relates to well-being, wholeness, and healing. In both professional and lay contexts, spirituality has come to the forefront of public consciousness.
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At the present time, there is a widening search for spirituality as distinct from organized religion, particularly as it relates to well-being, wholeness, and healing. In both professional and lay contexts, spirituality has come to the forefront of public consciousness.
openaire +2 more sources
Understanding spirituality and spiritual care in nursing
Nursing Standard, 2017Spirituality is a complex concept that has different meanings for different people. Spiritual care is a fundamental aspect of nursing and attending to the spiritual needs of patients may improve their health outcomes. This article, the first in a series of three, explores various definitions of spirituality, and the importance of spirituality and ...
Timmins, Fiona, Caldeira, Sílvia
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Spiritual Path, Spiritual Reality
2021A prominent mystic and renowned anti-colonial warrior from Indonesia, Shaykh Yusuf of Macassar (1626-1699) was exiled to South Africa, where he played a pioneering role in laying the foundations of Islam ...
Yousuf Dadoo, Auwais Rafudeen
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An inquiry into the concepts of spirituality and spiritual care
International Journal of Palliative Nursing, 2000The requirement of healthcare professionals to consider the whole person, including spirituality, is hampered by a lack of clarity about the nature of spirituality and spiritual care. A multidisciplinary cooperative inquiry group met during 1997 and 1998 to explore this issue.
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Student Perceptions of Spirituality and Spiritual Care
Journal of Christian Nursing, 2018ABSTRACT Nurse educators must equip students with beginning skills of assessment, communication, and awareness of spiritual care. Barriers to spiritual care—lack of time or of space, inadequate training—reduce nurses' provision of spiritual care.
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Nurses’ perceptions of spirituality and spiritual care
Nursing Standard, 1998This research study illustrates nurses' concern about spiritual care and the author demonstrates why this issue needs to be researched more fully to prepare nurses to fulfil this role appropriately.
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What is Spiritual? What is Spiritual Suffering?
Journal of Pastoral Care & Counseling: Advancing theory and professional practice through scholarly and reflective publications, 2004The author offers definitions for “spiritual” and for “spiritual suffering,” suggesting that human spiritual needs include Love, Faith, Hope, Virtue, and Beauty. Spiritual suffering is experienced when these needs are unfulfilled. Spiritual care involves assisting in the fulfillment of these needs.
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