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- Loralee Sessanna, Deborah S Finnell, Meghan Underhill, Yu-Ping Chang, and Hsi-Ling Peng.
- D'Youville College, School of Nursing, Buffalo, New York, USA. sessanna@dyc.edu
- J Adv Nurs. 2011 Aug 1;67(8):1677-94.
AimsThis paper is a report of a methodological review conducted to analyse, evaluate and synthesize the rigour of measures found in nursing and health-related literature used to assess and evaluate patient spirituality as more than religiosity.BackgroundHolistic healthcare practitioners recognize important distinctions exist about what constitutes spiritual care needs and preferences and what constitutes religious care needs and preferences in patient care practice.Data SourcesDatabases searched, limited to the years 1982 and 2009, included AMED, Alt Health Watch, CINAHL Plus with Full Text, EBSCO Host, EBSCO Host Religion and Philosophy, ERIC, Google Scholar, HAPI, HUBNET, IngentaConnect, Mental Measurements Yearbook Online, Ovid MEDLINE, Social Work Abstracts and Hill and Hood's Measures of Religiosity text.Review MethodsA methodological review was carried out. Measures assessing spirituality as more than religiosity were critically reviewed including quality appraisal, relevant data extraction and a narrative synthesis of findings.ResultsTen measures fitting inclusion criteria were included in the review. Despite agreement among nursing and health-related disciplines that spirituality and religiosity are distinct and diverse concepts, the concept of spirituality was often used interchangeably with the concept religion to assess and evaluate patient spirituality. The term spiritual or spirituality was used in a preponderance of items to assess or evaluate spirituality.ConclusionsMeasures differentiating spirituality from religiosity are grossly lacking in nursing and health-related literature.© 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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