This book will be of tremendous use to all healthcare professionals from physicians to nurses to social workers, rehabilitation therapists, and chaplains. The pathway taken here is a sensible and reasonable one, emphasizing a patient-centred approach that underscores the importance of spiritually competent care. The Editors do an excellent job of describing how to integrate spirituality into patient care for all of the different healthcare professionals. They also emphasize the importance of an evidence-based approach that is guided by research. This book provides superb guidelines that will be enormously helpful to every healthcare professional.
Harold G Koenig, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina
This practical guide tackles the important issues of spirituality in health care, emphasising the role of organisations in developing a culture of leadership and management that facilitates spiritual care. Spirituality is a central part of holistic care that addresses physical, mental, emotional and spiritual aspects of care in an integrated way.
The chapters are written by experts in their fields, pitched at the practitioner level rather than addressing ‘spirituality’ as a purely theoretical concept. Each one describes the realities of spiritually competent practice and show how it can be taught and put into practice in a variety of areas and settings, including
Undergraduate and Postgraduate education
Acute healthcare settings
Mental health
Primary care
End of Life Care
Creative organisations
Social services
Ideal for practitioners, educators, trainees and managers in nursing and healthcare, the book is also relevant reading for occupational therapists, physiotherapists, social workers and psychologists.
Author | John Wattis, Stephen Curran, Melanie Rogers |
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Table Of Content | Chapter 1: What does spirituality mean for patients, practitioners and healthcare organisations? John Wattis, Stephen Curran & Melanie Rogers Chapter 2: Spirituality in Western Multicultural Societies Marilynne Kirshbaum & Alison Rodriguez Chapter 3: Spiritually competent practice in healthcare: what is it and what does it look like? Janice Jones, Joanna Smith & Wilfred McSherry Chapter 4: How Two Practitioners Conceptualise Spiritually Competent Practice Melanie Rogers & Laura Béres Chapter 5: How Can Spirituality be Integrated in Undergraduate and Postgraduate Education? Michael Snowden & Gulnar Ali Chapter 6: Supporting the Practitioner Martin Seager & Mike Bush Chapter 7: Spirituality in acute healthcare settings Janice Jones, Joanna Smith & Wilfred McSherry Chapter 8: Spirituality and mental health John Wattis Chapter 9 Spirituality in the Primary Care Setting Penny Keith & Melanie Rogers Chapter 10 Spiritual Teamwork within End of Life Care Jonathan Sharp & Seamus Nash Chapter 11: Creative Organisations: spirituality and creativity in a health setting Phil Walters, Steven Michael & Mike Gartland Chapter 12: Using social role valorisation to make services sensitive to spiritual need Kevin Bond Chapter 13: A Vision for the future John Wattis, Stephen Curran & Melanie Rogers |
Publish Date | 4 Aug 2017 |