The Relationship Between Spiritual Care Levels of Turkish Nurses with the Spiritual Well-Being of Their Patients: An Exploratory Study

AbstractThe aim of this study was to determine the relationship between spiritual well-being of patients with the  spiritual care levels of nurses. This descriptive and cross-sectional study was conducted between July and August 2019. The sample was composed of 63 nurses from one university hospital and 142 patients receiving care at the department of internal medicine of the hospital. For data collection, the information form and “Spirituality and Spiritual Care Rating Scale” were applied to the nurses, personel information form and “FACIT Spiritual Well-Being Scale” were used for the patients. For data analysis, the descriptive statistics, Spearman correlation analysis, Mann–Whitney U and Kru skal–Wallis tests were used. The mean age of the nurses was 37.44 ± 6.95 years, and 88.9% were female. The mean age of the patients was 55.04 ± 15.86 years, and 57.7% were female. 89.4% of the patients stated that nurses provided spiritual care. A positive correlation was found between item scores on two scales (r = 0.264,p <  0.001). As the level of spirituality and spiritual care of nurses increases, the level of spiritual well-being of patients increases as well.
Source: Journal of Religion and Health - Category: Medical Ethics Source Type: research