Spirituality in Patients at the End of Life—Is It Necessary? A Qualitative Approach to the Protagonists
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Abstract
Spirituality is the most unknown aspect of palliative care despite being the need that is
most altered in the last moments of life. Objective. To identify on the one hand the spiritual needs of
patients who are at the end of life and on the other hand, the way in which nursing professionals can
work to provide effective accompaniment in this process. Method. A qualitative study was conducted
which applied different data collection techniques. This was done to describe the phenomenon
from a holistic perspective in relation to experts’ perceptions of the competencies required by health
professionals and palliative patients’ spiritual needs. Semi-structured interviews were conducted
within both populations. In order to analyze the qualitative data collected through interviews,
discourse was analyzed according to the Taylor–Bodgan model and processed using Atlas.ti software.
Results. Three well-differentiated lines of argument are extracted from the discourse in each of
the groups, on the one hand in the group of patients they define the concept of spirituality, system
of values and beliefs, and the Factors that influence the spirituality of patients at the end of life
(differentiating palliative care areas/other areas) and on the other, the professionals agree with the
patients in the line of argument of concept of spirituality although they define more metaphysical
categories and the other two lines of argument that result are the spiritual attention in this process
and the need for formation in spirituality. Conclusions. The provision of spiritual care gives meaning
to the actions of nursing professionals when it comes to providing end-of-life care, achieving holistic
care, humanizing death, and promoting a dignified end
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Bibliographic citation
García-Navarro, E. B., Medina-Ortega, A., & García Navarro, S. (2021). Spirituality in Patients at the End of Life—Is It Necessary? A Qualitative Approach to the Protagonists. In International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (Vol. 19, Issue 1, p. 227). MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010227














