Factors associated with spiritual care competencies in Taiwan’s clinical nurses: A descriptive correlational study

Aims and objectives To determine factors associated with nurses’ spiritual care competencies. Background Holistic nursing care includes biopsychosocial and spiritual care. However, nurses are limited by a lack of knowledge, time constraints and apprehension of assessing spiritual issues, which leave...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of clinical nursing Vol. 29; no. 9-10; pp. 1599 - 1613
Main Authors Hsieh, Suh‐Ing, Hsu, Li‐Ling, Kao, Chen‐Yi, Breckenridge‐Sproat, Sara, Lin, Hui‐Ling, Tai, Hsiu‐Chen, Huang, Tzu‐Hsin, Chu, Tsung‐Lan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.05.2020
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Aims and objectives To determine factors associated with nurses’ spiritual care competencies. Background Holistic nursing care includes biopsychosocial and spiritual care. However, nurses are limited by a lack of knowledge, time constraints and apprehension of assessing spiritual issues, which leaves them unable to assess and meet patients’ spiritual needs. Thus, when patients experience spiritual distress, clinical nurses lose the opportunity to support spiritual growth and self‐actualisation. In Taiwan, spiritual care, religion and culture are unique compared to those in other countries. Overall, factors associated with Taiwanese nurses’ spiritual care competencies lack comprehensive exploration. Methods This study adopted a descriptive correlational design using cross‐sectional survey (see Appendix S1). Cluster sampling was used to select clinical nurses from fourteen units of a medical centre and a regional hospital. Data were collected from January–June 2018 with a 97.03% response rate. Clinical nurses completed a background questionnaire, spiritual care practice questionnaire, spirituality and spiritual care‐related scales. Data were analysed using descriptive and linear regression. This report followed the STROBE checklist. Results Spiritual care competence ranged from 44–123 (mean 84.67 ± 12.88; range 27–135). The majority of clinical nurses rated their spiritual care competence as moderate (64–98). The significant factors associated with nurses’ spiritual care competence were education, religion, interest in spiritual care, having role models, past life events, barriers to providing spiritual care of the spiritual care practice score, and spiritual attitude and involvement score. The overall model was significant (p < .001) and accounted for 55.0% of variance (adjusted R2 = .488). Conclusions Most clinical nurses have moderate spiritual care competence. Objective factors identified affect clinical nurses’ spiritual care competencies. Relevance to clinical practice To improve nurses’ spiritual care competencies, objective factors that affect clinical nurses’ spiritual care competencies must be emphasised. Multiple strategies for enhancing nurses’ own spiritual well‐being can be provided via employee health promotion projects and activities, and promoting nurses’ spirituality and spiritual care competencies can be explored in clinical settings through bedside teaching, situational simulation, objective structured clinical examinations and self‐reflection.
Bibliography:Funding information
This research was sponsored by Taiwan's Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST 106‐2511‐S‐255‐008).
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0962-1067
1365-2702
DOI:10.1111/jocn.15141