Introduction
The concept of faith has two uses described in the literature. In the first, faith is defined as a cultural Or institutional religion, SUCH as Judaism, Buddhism, Islam, Or Christianity. Second, faith is a relationship with a divinity, higher power, authority, OJ-spirit that incorporates a reasoning faith (belief) and a trusting faith)..However, faith also might be the manner in which a person chooses to live life. Faith in this sense enables action. Spirituality frames individuals' lives. Individuals become open to discover their unique spiritual meaning after a crisis that threatens health.
Religion is associated with …show more content…
Once a trusting relationship with a client is established, the nurse and client reach a point of learning together, and spiritual caring can occur. The nurse learns to consciously integrate an attitude of spiritual care into the nursing process, The assessment should focus on aspects of spirituality most likely to be influenced by life experiences, events, and questions in the case of illness and hospitalization conducting an assessment can be done. The helping role is important in nursing practice (Benner, 1984). Clients look to nurses for a different kind of help than that sought from other health care professionals. Expert nurses acquire the ability to anticipate the personal issues affecting clients ‘abilities to receive and seek help, including their spiritual well-being. Critical thinking knowledge and skills help to enhance clients' spiritual well-being ailed health. While using the nursing process, the nurse, knowledge, experience, attitudes, and standards providing appropriate spiritual care. Knowledge about spirituality begins with nurses' insight about their own spirituality believe it is important that nurses experience a self-exploration through reading, religious involvement, or activities such as meditation to understand their own beliefs and …show more content…
The paper gives an overview of nursing research papers published on spiritual care between 1983 and October 2005. It also provides pointers for the future direction of research in this emerging field. Spiritual care of patients/clients is expected of nurses and is reflected in nursing codes of ethics, nurse education guidelines, policy documents and nursing guidance. Recent years have seen a proliferation in nursing research in this area, particularly in the UK and North America, and now in other European countries. It seemed timely, therefore, to review this published research. The method Included in the review were 47 original published nursing research papers identified from a CINAHL search and from a collection held by the author since 1983. Papers were sorted into five categories, a template to aid reviewing was produced and a short summary and critique of each paper was written and is concluded as spirituality and health needs to move forward in a systematic and co-ordinated