4.4 Article

Spiritual care in Australian general practice nursing: An interpretive descriptive study

Journal

NURSING & HEALTH SCIENCES
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 670-678

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nhs.12961

Keywords

Australia; holistic care; nursing; primary health care; spiritual care; spirituality

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This study examined the perspectives of practice nurses in Australian General Practice on spiritual care using an interpretive description study design. The findings highlighted the importance of improving nurses' understanding of spirituality and providing tools to address spiritual needs expressed by patients.
Spiritual care as an aspect of holistic or person-centered care has been well documented. Studies on spirituality and spiritual care in nursing have taken place in various countries and contexts. Studies about spiritual care from the nurse perspective in the primary healthcare setting of Australian General Practice are not evident. Using an interpretive description study design, data about views on spirituality, spiritual care experiences, and descriptions about any spiritual care provided were collected from eight practice nurses. Four themes were drawn from the findings: the personal importance of spirituality and spiritual care to nurses and patients, spiritual care as an aspect of person-centered care, spiritual care practices, and barriers and enablers to addressing spiritual needs. Participants identified that practice nurses require improved education about spirituality to adequately address spiritual needs as expressed by patients, as well as the tools to be able to provide spiritual care. They also identified that documentation templates used in general practice should include prompts to address spiritual and/or religious needs.

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