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Contributions for teaching religiosity/spirituality in undergraduate nursing programs: a qualitative study with Brazilian nurses

Objective: to identify and collect recommendations for teaching religiosity/spirituality in undergraduate Nursing courses of nurses working in a Hospital. Method: this is a qualitative study, with 34 nurses interviewed. The research corpus was fully transcribed and submitted to content analysis. Res...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Nursing and Health 2023-08, Vol.13 (2), p.e1322312
Main Authors: Cunha, Vivian Fukumasu da, Coimbra, Susana, Fontaine, Anne Marie, Neubern, Maurício da Silva, Scorsolini-Comin, Fabio
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Objective: to identify and collect recommendations for teaching religiosity/spirituality in undergraduate Nursing courses of nurses working in a Hospital. Method: this is a qualitative study, with 34 nurses interviewed. The research corpus was fully transcribed and submitted to content analysis. Results: the religiosity/spirituality theme was absent in the graduation of most of professionals. They mentioned the restricted preparation to deal with human issues and for being a dimension that offers a resource to face the challenges of the daily life of the profession. What mitigated this gap was that some professionals have their own religious/spiritual beliefs, which have often guided how this religious/spiritual support is provided in health care. Conclusions: participants suggest the presence of religiosity/spirituality teaching in nursing graduation effectively and practically, not only theoretically reinforce its importance. Taking religiosity/spirituality content to undergraduate courses can be sensitive to the holistic needs of patients/users and even the professionals themselves.
ISSN:2236-1987
2236-1987
DOI:10.15210/jonah.v13i2.23312