Taylor Elizabeth Johnston, Gober-Park Carla, Schoonover-Shoffner Kathy, Mamier Iris, Somaiya Chintan K, Bahjri Khaled
School of Nursing, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, California.
School of Religion, Center for Spiritual Life & Wholeness, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, California.
J Adv Nurs. 2018 Oct;74(10):2381-2392. doi: 10.1111/jan.13777. Epub 2018 Jul 10.
The aim of this study was to understand nurses' opinions about initiating spiritual or religious conversation during patient care and to measure how these perspectives are associated with demographic, religious and work-related characteristics.
Nurses are expected to provide spiritual care and do so in diverse ways. Little is known about how nurses think about initiating spiritual or religious discourse.
Cross-sectional, quantitative.
Online survey methods allowed data collection from 445 nurses. The survey, accessed from the homepage of the Journal of Christian Nursing for 6 months beginning June 2015, included scales measuring various facets of religiosity, and items assessing nurse opinions about introducing spirituality or religion during patient care and demographic and work-related variables. Variables showing significant associations with Nurse Opinion items in bivariate analyses were examined using binary logistic regression.
About 90% of participants believed it appropriate to initiate conversation about spirituality/religion and nearly three-quarters thought it appropriate to self-disclose spirituality/religion or offer prayer under certain circumstances or anytime. All personal religiosity indicators except tentativeness of belief were found to be associated with responses to Nurse Opinion items. That is, higher religiosity was associated with opinion one could initiate such conversations, whereas lower religiosity was associated with waiting for patients to initiate. Nurses working in a faith-based organization were 276% more likely to believe they could initiate such conversation and 153% more likely to think they could initiate an offer of prayer.
Nurse religiosity and work environment were associated with nurse opinions about initiating spiritual/religious discourse with patients.
本研究旨在了解护士对于在患者护理过程中开启精神或宗教对话的看法,并衡量这些观点如何与人口统计学、宗教及工作相关特征相关联。
护士应提供精神护理,且方式多样。对于护士如何看待开启精神或宗教对话,我们知之甚少。
横断面定量研究。
采用在线调查方法收集了445名护士的数据。该调查从2015年6月起在《基督教护理杂志》主页上开放6个月,其中包括测量宗教信仰各个方面的量表,以及评估护士对于在患者护理过程中引入精神或宗教内容、人口统计学和工作相关变量的看法的项目。在双变量分析中与护士看法项目显示出显著关联的变量,使用二元逻辑回归进行了检验。
约90%的参与者认为开启关于精神/宗教的对话是合适的,近四分之三的人认为在某些情况下或任何时候自我披露精神/宗教内容或进行祈祷是合适的。除了信仰的不确定性外,所有个人宗教信仰指标均与护士看法项目的回答相关。也就是说,较高的宗教信仰与认为可以开启此类对话的观点相关,而较低的宗教信仰与等待患者开启相关。在基于信仰的组织中工作的护士认为自己可以开启此类对话的可能性高276%,认为自己可以开启祈祷提议的可能性高153%。
护士的宗教信仰和工作环境与护士对于与患者开启精神/宗教对话的看法相关。