Association Among Workplace Spirituality, Spiritual Well-Being, and Spiritual Care in Practice With Multiple Mediators for Clinical Nurses
- Authors
- Rhyu, K.; Lee, G.; Baek, Heechong
- Issue Date
- Feb-2023
- Publisher
- Slack Incorporated
- Citation
- Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing, v.54, no.2, pp 89 - 96
- Pages
- 8
- Journal Title
- Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing
- Volume
- 54
- Number
- 2
- Start Page
- 89
- End Page
- 96
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/66343
- DOI
- 10.3928/00220124-20230113-08
- ISSN
- 0022-0124
1938-2472
- Abstract
- Background: Spiritual care helps individuals encounter the transcendent meaning of their crises. How-ever, nurses report various barriers to providing spiritual care in clinical settings. To facilitate spiritual care among nurses, a more comprehensive understanding of this field is needed. This study was conducted to establish a path model for multiple factors predict-ing spiritual care among nurses working in hospitals. Method: A cross-sectional descriptive design was used. The participants were 370 nurses with more than 6 months of experience working in general hospitals in South Korea. The measures used in this study were nursing workplace spirituality, a spiritual well-being scale, the Maslach Burnout Inventory—Human Services Survey for Medical Personnel, a scale for compassionate care, a general self-efficacy scale, and spiritual care in practice. Path analysis was performed using IBM SPSS Statistics, version 24.0, and SPSS Amos, version 20.0. Results: Workplace spirituality and spiritual well-being predicted higher spiritual care in practice by se-quentially mediating burnout and compassionate care. Conclusion: This study suggests that nurses’ spiritual care can be increased via the development of specific strategies focused on enhancing the nursing workplace spirituality of hospital organizations, promoting individual spiritual well-being and compassionate be-havior, and reducing burnout among nurses. © SLACK Incorporated.
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Collections - Red Cross College of Nursing > Department of Nursing > 1. Journal Articles
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