• Oncology nursing forum · Jul 2006

    Development and testing of the spiritual needs inventory for patients near the end of life.

    • Carla Hermann.
    • School of Nursing, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, USA. cpherm01@louisville.edu
    • Oncol Nurs Forum. 2006 Jul 1;33(4):737-44.

    Purpose/ObjectivesTo develop and test an instrument to measure the spiritual needs of patients near the end of life.DesignInstrumentation methodology.SettingOne inpatient and five outpatient hospices.Sample62 female and 38 male hospice patients with a mean age of 67 years; most were Caucasian, Protestant, and dying of cancer.MethodsItems for the Spiritual Needs Inventory (SNI) were developed from a qualitative study of spiritual needs of dying patients. Data were analyzed for internal consistency using Cronbach's alpha and item-to-total correlations and for content and construct validity using factor analysis.Main Research VariablesSpiritual needs and life satisfaction.FindingsThe total scale alpha of the 27-item SNI was 0.81. Item-to-total correlations ranged from 0.07-0.65, resulting in seven items being eliminated. A principal component factor analysis with a promax oblique rotation was used to estimate content and construct validity. A total of 17 items comprised the five-factor solution. Cronbach's alpha for the revised SNI was 0.85.ConclusionsThe SNI is a valid and reliable measurement of spiritual needs of patients near the end of life. Further psychometric testing of this newly developed instrument is warranted.Implications For NursingNurses must recognize the spiritual needs of all patients, particularly those near the end of life. The SNI may be useful in the clinical setting as well as in future studies of spiritual needs of patients.

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