Life-Closing Spirituality and the Philosophic Assumptions of the Roy Adaptation Model
Secondary analysis of data from a previous study that referenced spirituality was coded, categorized, and grouped into themes. Life-closing spirituality for 44 (45.4%) of 97 total participants was shaped by a core theme ofbelieving that was central to dying persons. Believing was linked to six other...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nursing science quarterly 2004-10, Vol.17 (4), p.335-338 |
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description | Secondary analysis of data from a previous study that referenced spirituality was coded, categorized, and grouped into themes. Life-closing spirituality for 44 (45.4%) of 97 total participants was shaped by a core theme ofbelieving that was central to dying persons. Believing was linked to six other themes: comforting, releasing, connecting, giving, reframing, and requesting. These themes supported the philosophic assumptions and principles of humanism and veritivity as defined in the Roy adaptation model. |
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Life-closing spirituality for 44 (45.4%) of 97 total participants was shaped by a core theme ofbelieving that was central to dying persons. Believing was linked to six other themes: comforting, releasing, connecting, giving, reframing, and requesting. These themes supported the philosophic assumptions and principles of humanism and veritivity as defined in the Roy adaptation model.</abstract><cop>Thousand Oaks, CA</cop><pub>Sage Publications</pub><pmid>15359035</pmid><doi>10.1177/0894318404268826</doi><tpages>4</tpages></addata></record> |
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subjects | Adaptation, Psychological Aged Attitude to Death Existentialism Female Helping Behavior Home Care Services Hospice Care - psychology Humans Male Models, Nursing Models, Psychological Nursing Nursing Methodology Research Philosophy, Nursing Qualitative Research Religion and Psychology Social Support Spirituality Terminally Ill - psychology |
title | Life-Closing Spirituality and the Philosophic Assumptions of the Roy Adaptation Model |
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