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1 Chapter 35 Spiritual Health. Mind, body, and spirit are interrelated. Physical and psychological well-being results from beliefs and expectations. Beliefs.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Chapter 35 Spiritual Health. Mind, body, and spirit are interrelated. Physical and psychological well-being results from beliefs and expectations. Beliefs."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Chapter 35 Spiritual Health

2 Mind, body, and spirit are interrelated. Physical and psychological well-being results from beliefs and expectations. Beliefs and convictions are powerful resources for healing.

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4  Spirituality: complex, unique to the individual  Spiritual well-being: an interconnectedness between God or a higher power and other people  Faith: several definitions  Religion: associated with a specific system of practice associated with a denomination, sect, or form of worship  Hope: gives an individual a motivation and the resources to achieve

5  Atheist: one who does not believe in the existence of God  Agnostic: one who believes that there is no known ultimate reality  Self-transcendence: a sense of authentically connecting to one’s inner self  Transcendence: the belief that a force outside of and greater than the person exists beyond the material world

6 Patients benefit from both types of care. Religious care: helping patients maintain faithfulness to their belief system and worship practices Spiritual care: helping people identify meaning and purpose in life, look beyond the present, and maintain personal relations as well as a relationship with a higher being or life force

7  Spiritual health represents a balance.  Spiritual health matures with increasing awareness of meaning, purpose, and life values.  Spiritual beliefs change as patients grow and develop.  Spiritual distress: impaired ability to experience and integrate meaning and purpose in life through connectedness with self, others, art, music, literature, nature, and/or a power greater than oneself

8  Acute illness  Sudden, unexpected  Chronic illness  Threatens a person’s independence  Terminal illness  Uncertainty about death  Near-death experience (NDE)  Psychological phenomenon close to clinical death or recovered after declared death

9 Apply knowledge, experience, standards, and attitudes. Personal experience in caring for patients in spiritual distress is valuable when helping patients select coping options. Each person has a unique spirituality. The Joint Commission requires health organizations to provide for pastoral care.

10  Assessment  Establish trust.  Diagnosis  Use North American Nursing Diagnosis Association International (NANDA-I)-approved list.  Planning  Goals need to be realistic and individualized.  Implementation  This is based on phase of care.  Evaluation  This involves an increased or restored sense of connectedness.

11  Assessment expresses a level of caring and support.  Establish a trusting relationship.  Assess patient’s viewpoints.  Ask direct questions.  Utilize spiritual assessment tools:  SWB (Spiritual Well-Being Scale)  BELIEF (belief, ethics, lifestyle, involvement, education, future events)

12  Faith/Belief: ask about a religious source of guidance  Life and self-responsibility: ask about a patient’s understanding of illness limitations or threats and how the patient will adjust  Life satisfaction  Connectedness: ask about the patient’s ability to express a sense of relatedness to something greater than self

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14  Culture: ask about faith and belief systems to understand culture and spirituality relationships  Fellowship and community: ask about support networks  Ritual and practice: ask about life practices used to assist in structure and support during difficult times  Vocation: ask whether illness or hospitalization has altered spiritual expression

15  Potential diagnoses: anxiety, ineffective coping, fear, complicated grieving, hopelessness, powerlessness  NANDA-I accepted diagnoses:  Readiness for enhanced spiritual well-being  Spiritual distress  Risk for spiritual distress

16 Goals and outcomes A spiritual care plan includes realistic and individualized goals with relevant outcomes. Setting priorities The patient identifies what is most important. Teamwork and collaboration In a hospital setting, the pastoral care department is a valuable resource.

17  Health promotion  Establishing presence— involves giving attention, answering questions, having an encouraging attitude, and expressing a sense of trust; “being with” rather than “doing for”  Supportive healing relationship  Mobilize hope.  Provide interpretation of suffering that is acceptable to patient.  Help patient use resources.

18  Acute care  Support systems  Diet therapies  Supporting rituals  Restorative and continuing care  Prayer  Meditation  Supportive grief work

19  Were expectations met?  How can spiritual well-being be enhanced?  Were patient outcomes achieved?  Include the patient in your evaluation of care.  Successful outcomes reveal the patient developing an increased or restored sense of connectedness with family; maintaining, renewing, or re-forming a sense of purpose in life; and for some, exhibiting confidence and trust in a Supreme Being or power.

20  Spirituality ensures a holistic focus.  Spirituality is much broader and unifying than religion.  Spirituality requires open communication and establishment of trust between nurse and patient.  Spirituality involves faith, support systems, and hope.


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