| Literature DB >> 19594903 |
Michael B King1, Harold G Koenig.
Abstract
The need to take account of spirituality in research and health services provision is assuming ever greater importance. However the field has long been hampered by a lack of conceptual clarity about the nature of spirituality itself. We do not agree with the sceptical claim that it is impossible to conceptualize spirituality within a scientific paradigm. Our aims are to 1) provide a brief over-view of critical thinking that might form the basis for a useful definition of spirituality for research and clinical work and 2) demystify the language of spirituality for clinical practice and research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19594903 PMCID: PMC2722588 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-9-116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
A definition of spirituality
| 1. | An assent to or conviction about a domain or existence that goes beyond the material world. This includes all manner of religious or other beliefs that are not based on materialism. |
| 2. | Spiritual or religious practice at this level occurs |
| 3. | There is an awareness of being moved intellectually and/or emotionally. It includes contemplation, prayer, meditation or reflection when there is conscious awareness of, or response to, this dimension. |
| 4. | A discrete experience which may include diffusion of the mind, loss of ego boundaries and a change in orientation from self towards or beyond the material world. The experience usually comes unbidden but may follow a period of reflection, meditation, stress or isolation. Ecstatic experiences are of this type, but experience may be much less intense and more prolonged. |
| Any consideration of the source of spirituality, be it secular, sacred, divine or diabolical. | |
| These may be proximate such as happiness, fear, a new sense of meaning or the intention to live an ethical life; or distant such as economic success or failure and changes in physical or mental health, or in relationships. | |
| Secular systems of virtue, ethics or morality. |
Questions to explore spirituality in a clinical setting
| 1. Are you in any way a spiritual person? |
| 2. Do you observe a religion? |
| 3. Is your spirituality mainly about you personally or is it found more in your relationships with other people? |
| 4. Does your spirituality help you cope with life's difficulties? |
| 5. Does your spirituality help you cope with illness or disability? |
| 6. Have you ever been aware of a spiritual realm or presence? |
| 7. Have you ever had a very intense experience (unrelated to drugs or alcohol) in which you felt some deep new meaning in life, or at one with the world or universe? (If you believe in God it may have felt like an experience of God.) |