2019
DOI: 10.1017/s1478951519000117
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Spirituality in the continuing education of healthcare professionals: An approach to palliative care

Abstract: ObjectiveA major barrier to the adoption of an approach that integrates spirituality into palliative care is the lack of preparation/education of healthcare professionals on the topic. This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a continuing education activity for healthcare professionals addressing spirituality and spiritual care provision to patients and families within palliative care.MethodWe conducted an intervention study using a quantitative pre- and posttest design in a convenience sample of 52 h… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(19 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
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“…Our findings were consistent with prior studies on spiritual care education for interdisciplinary healthcare professionals, generally showing positive effects on participants’ competencies and readiness to provide generalist spiritual care 14,39–47 . Although they consider spiritual care beneficial, interdisciplinary clinicians report barriers to providing generalist spiritual care, such as insufficient training and competencies, perceiving it as not integral to their roles, and discussing spiritual issues with their patients infrequently and inconsistently 6–9 .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Our findings were consistent with prior studies on spiritual care education for interdisciplinary healthcare professionals, generally showing positive effects on participants’ competencies and readiness to provide generalist spiritual care 14,39–47 . Although they consider spiritual care beneficial, interdisciplinary clinicians report barriers to providing generalist spiritual care, such as insufficient training and competencies, perceiving it as not integral to their roles, and discussing spiritual issues with their patients infrequently and inconsistently 6–9 .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Clinicians, especially, are increasingly aware of the need to be spiritually competent. To this end, spiritual competence is being assessed among nurses (Keenan & Kirwan, 2018), and training programs offered for clinicians (Bandini et al, 2019;Chen et al, 2020;Dezorzi et al, 2019;Scott Barss, 2020). But clinicians, to say nothing of housekeeping and activities staff, are not specialists in spiritual care and cannot be expected to adequately understand and support residents' spiritual experience.…”
Section: Who Provides Spiritual Care?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…22,49 However, nurses' role in supporting the spiritual well-being of patients is well-established, 18 addressing patients' spiritual needs is considered part of their profession, 50 and nurses and midwives' education standards in SC have considerably progressed. [51][52][53] For this reason, this study explored NHS nurse managers' and chaplains' experi- Based on this sub-dataset, this article aims to identify the main components and resulting recommendation for practical actions of a NS for the provision of SC to patients, their families and the health workforce during MHDs.…”
Section: Highlightsmentioning
confidence: 99%