Background
Over the past decade there has been growing interest in spiritual caring in nursing. Professional nursing bodies have proposed spirituality and spiritual caring as an integral component of holistic nursing (International Council of Nurses 2003, Australian Nursing & Midwifery Council 2006, Black et al. 2008, Nursing & Midwifery Council 2010). However, spiritual caring has long been identified as a difficult area for nurses to articulate (Clarke 2009). This difficulty is due, in part, to the nebulous nature of spirituality, and to a general lack of language to define spirituality in nursing and to describe spiritual caring (Chiu et al. 2004, McSherry et al. 2004, Miner-Williams 2006, Ross 2006, Chan 2010). For these reasons this study is timely and significant.
Background
Over the past decade there has been growing interest in spiritual caring in nursing. Professional nursing bodies have proposed spirituality and spiritual caring as an integral component of holistic nursing (International Council of Nurses 2003, Australian Nursing & Midwifery Council 2006, Black et al. 2008, Nursing & Midwifery Council 2010). However, spiritual caring has long been identified as a difficult area for nurses to articulate (Clarke 2009). This difficulty is due, in part, to the nebulous nature of spirituality, and to a general lack of language to define spirituality in nursing and to describe spiritual caring (Chiu et al. 2004, McSherry et al. 2004, Miner-Williams 2006, Ross 2006, Chan 2010). For these reasons this study is timely and significant.
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..