Understanding Spiritual Care—Perspectives from Healthcare Professionals in a Norwegian Nursing Home
Abstract
:1. Background
Spirituality is the dynamic dimension of human life that relates to the way persons (individual and community) experience, express and/or seek meaning, purpose and transcendence, and the way they connect to the moment, to self, to others, to nature, to the significant and/or the sacred.
Existential challenges (e.g., questions concerning identity, meaning, suffering and death, guilt and shame, reconciliation and forgiveness, freedom and responsibility, hope and despair, love and joy).
Value based considerations and attitudes (what is most important for each person, such as relationships with oneself, family, friends, work, nature, art and culture, ethics and morals, and life itself).
Religious considerations and foundations (faith, beliefs and practices, the relationship with God or the ultimate).
1.1. Theoretical Foundation
1.2. Aim and Research Question
“What are healthcare professionals’ understandings of spiritual care?”
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Caring for the Whole Person
“I had a regular shift with a patient one day and he was somehow in great physical pain since he just had surgery (…) And then he said he wished he could pray to God. Then I explained to him, we do not have to be physically ready to pray, but that you can pray while you are in bed, God can hear you anyway”.
“To meet all the needs of the patient. That I would say is good care”.
“And I think that in a way [spiritual care] means a lot. It’s not just about faith and doubt etc. But it is to see and be seen. It is hearing and being heard. What goes (…) I think it’s like it’s all that goes beyond the purely practical that we are going to do with the patients.”
3.2. Having a Personal Touch
“Nora: I cannot say why I’m good at it.
Sara: I know something about it, I think. And it has to do with the fact that Nora, is genuinely interested in people, and that is the basis of it, there is a lot there. (...) And Nora is a person who is very fond of people.”
3.3. Seeing the Person Behind the Diagnosis
(...) We must see behind the disease; we must see this person. What has life been like? She has been a good wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, but now she is ill, and perhaps a bit mischievous, but we must put that aside and look behind. Yes, be warm and show empathy.
“I think in a way, our patients, [when you think of spiritual care as a part of the care], you give something extra to the care situation, of course, all their physical, all the needs are met. You find out what they bring with them from their history and take care of them in relation to that (…). And that they experience that we see and hear them, and feel unique, just as they are, in the present.”
“Spiritual care is always important, throughout life, but it is essential when you are in a nursing home; you lose a bit of yourself, of your identity when moving into an institution: Their home, their things, life in general. Then we must manage to get a grip of what they need from the spiritual part.”
- Kristin:
- I think everyone should have it as a task. Nevertheless, not everyone has the natural ability to think about it. (...) some have it more in them by nature, I think.
- Harald:
- I think the same because it is unrelated to a specific professional group. Even though I am here as a chaplain, I will only focus on it. Because here I think they need competence in what we are going to do (...).
3.4. More than Religiousness
- Sara:
- Immediately when I heard the word spiritual care, I thought of religion, (…) i.e., Christianity for most, but also other religions, but that is not what I really mean by spiritual care (…).
- Nora:
- Me to, religion was the first thing that struck me, but I soon found out that it was more than that, that it was the existential needs too.
- Tone:
- I also thought of religion when I heard it, but yes, it is so much more (…).
- Kristin:
- I went to a religious Nursing school in Norway, and there was this with physical and mental, spiritual, and social needs important, so at that time, then I remember that it was more connected to religion. I did not think there was a focus on spiritual care being more than religion at that time then, but it has, just as it has changed, that there has been more understanding around spiritual care (…) I feel that there has not been so much focus on it, I have missed that focus. The physical needs have been so clear (…) the mental aspect, it has been so clear, but the spiritual has been a bit unclear, the spiritual, we have somehow. I think it was about religion, but it was in the beginning when I finished my training as a nurse, but then you understand, when you get more experience, that spiritual care is much more.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions and Relevance for Clinical Practice
Methodological Considerations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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|
Name | Profession | Setting |
---|---|---|
Maya | Assistant nurse | Individual interview |
Leila | Assistant nurse | |
Meshid | Assistant nurse | |
Winita | Assistant nurse | |
Kari | Occupational therapist | |
Sayid | Healthcaresupport worker | |
Ingrid | Registered nurse | |
Helena | Registered nurse | |
Nora | Assistant nurse | Focus group interview |
Sara | Registered nurse | |
Tone | Registered nurse | |
Kristin | Registered nurse | |
Harald | Chaplain |
Meaning unit | Condensed meaning unit (description close to the text) | Condensed meaning unit (Interpretation of the underlying meaning) | Theme |
But if it becomes very religious then I do not know if we have the same understanding or views about it | If it becomes very religious, personnel might not have the same understanding or view of spiritual care | Healthcare professionals own personal spirituality and religious beliefs colour their understanding of the content of spiritual care | More than religiousness |
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Morland, M.; McSherry, W.; Rykkje, L. Understanding Spiritual Care—Perspectives from Healthcare Professionals in a Norwegian Nursing Home. Religions 2022, 13, 239. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030239
Morland M, McSherry W, Rykkje L. Understanding Spiritual Care—Perspectives from Healthcare Professionals in a Norwegian Nursing Home. Religions. 2022; 13(3):239. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030239
Chicago/Turabian StyleMorland, Marianne, Wilfred McSherry, and Linda Rykkje. 2022. "Understanding Spiritual Care—Perspectives from Healthcare Professionals in a Norwegian Nursing Home" Religions 13, no. 3: 239. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030239
APA StyleMorland, M., McSherry, W., & Rykkje, L. (2022). Understanding Spiritual Care—Perspectives from Healthcare Professionals in a Norwegian Nursing Home. Religions, 13(3), 239. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030239