Literature DB >> 18336707

A conversation on diverse perspectives of spirituality in nursing literature.

Barbara Pesut1.   

Abstract

Spirituality has long been considered a dimension of holistic palliative care. However, conceptualizations of spirituality are in transition in the nursing literature. No longer rooted within religion, spirituality is increasingly being defined by the universal search for meaning, connectedness, energy, and transcendence. To be human is to be spiritual. Some have argued that the concept of spirituality in the nursing literature has become so generic that it is no longer meaningful. A conceptualization that attempts to be all-encompassing of what it means to live a human life has a tendency to render invisible the differences that make life meaningful. For palliative patients in particular, a generic approach may obscure and relativize the important values and beliefs that inform the critical questions that many patients grapple with at end of life. A different approach to conceptualizing spirituality can be achieved through the use of typologies. Rather than obscuring difference, categories are constructed to illuminate how spirituality is understood within a diverse society and how those understandings might influence patient-provider relationships. What follows in this article is a dialogue illustrating one typology of spirituality constructed from a review of selected nursing literature. The hypothetical narrator and three participants, representing the positions of theism, monism, and humanism, discuss their understandings of spirituality and religion, and how those understandings influence the intersections between nursing ontology, epistemology, and spiritual care.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18336707     DOI: 10.1111/j.1466-769X.2008.00341.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nurs Philos        ISSN: 1466-7681            Impact factor:   1.279


  6 in total

1.  Exploring spirituality in family caregivers of patients with primary malignant brain tumors across the disease trajectory.

Authors:  Alyssa G Newberry; Chien-Wen Jean Choi; Heidi S Donovan; Richard Schulz; Catherine Bender; Barbara Given; Paula Sherwood
Journal:  Oncol Nurs Forum       Date:  2013-05-01       Impact factor: 2.172

2.  Using spirituality to cope with early-stage Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Linda Beuscher; Victoria T Grando
Journal:  West J Nurs Res       Date:  2009-03-11       Impact factor: 1.967

3.  Re-examining definitions of spirituality in nursing research.

Authors:  Katia Garcia Reinert; Harold G Koenig
Journal:  J Adv Nurs       Date:  2013-04-18       Impact factor: 3.187

4.  Thoughts of creation and the discipline of nursing.

Authors:  Margareth Kristoffersen
Journal:  Nurs Open       Date:  2019-02-06

Review 5.  Existential distress among caregivers of patients with brain tumors: a review of the literature.

Authors:  Allison J Applebaum; Maria Kryza-Lacombe; Justin Buthorn; Antonio DeRosa; Geoff Corner; Eli L Diamond
Journal:  Neurooncol Pract       Date:  2015-12-08

6.  The effect of self-transcendence on depression in cognitively intact nursing home patients.

Authors:  Gørill Haugan; Siw Tone Innstrand
Journal:  ISRN Psychiatry       Date:  2012-06-03
  6 in total

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