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  1. Spiritual development in Iranian nurses.Shirmohammad Davoodvand, Abbas Abbaszadeh & Fazlollah Ahmadi - 2017 - Nursing Ethics 24 (8):936-949.
    Background:Spiritual development is one of the most important aspects of socialization that has attracted the attention of researchers. It is needed to train nursing student and novice nurses to provide high-quality care for patients. There is ambiguity in the definition of spiritual development and its relations, especially in the eastern countries.Research objectives::To explore the concept of spiritual development in Iranian nurses.Research design:Qualitative content analysis approach. Data were gathered from semi-structured interviews. Participants and research context: The participants were 17 Iranian Muslim (...)
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  • To pray or not to pray: A challenge in nursing education.Caldeira Sílvia - 2017 - Nursing Ethics 24 (4):502-503.
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  • A critical analysis of scales to measure the attitude of nurses toward spiritual care and the frequency of spiritual nursing care activities.Bert Garssen, Anne Frederieke Ebenau, Anja Visser, Nicoline Uwland & Marieke Groot - 2017 - Nursing Inquiry 24 (3):e12178.
    Quantitative studies have assessed nurses’ attitudes toward and frequency of spiritual care [SC] and which factors are of influence on this attitude and frequency. However, we had doubts about the construct validity of the scales used in these studies. Our objective was to evaluate scales measuring nursing SC. Articles about the development and psychometric evaluation of SC scales have been identified, using, Web of Science, and CINAHL, and evaluated with respect to the psychometric properties and item content of the scales. (...)
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  • Spirituality in nursing education: knowledge and practice gaps.Gulnar Ali, Michael Snowden, John Wattis & Melanie Rogers - 2018 - International Journal of Multidisciplinary Comparative Studies 5 (1-3):27-49.
    Nursing philosophy is fundamentally based on an ethos of holistic care. However, spiritual aspects of care are often neglected. There are questions about how spirituality is currently approached and to what extent student nurses feel competent in assessing and delivering spiritual care in practice. A literature review was performed, using a systematic approach. From the themes identified in the literature review, five major knowledge and practice gaps were noted in nurse education. These were: lack of ontological integration; lack in phenomenological (...)
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