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A meaning-centered spiritual care training program for hospice palliative care teams in South Korea: development and preliminary evaluation

Spirituality is a fundamental, intrinsic aspect of human beings and should be a core component of quality palliative care. There is an urgent need to train hospice palliative care teams (HPCTs) to enhance their ability to provide spiritual care. This study aimed to develop and evaluate a meaning-cen...

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Published in:BMC palliative care 2021-02, Vol.20 (1), p.30-30, Article 30
Main Authors: Kang, Kyung-Ah, Kim, Shin-Jeong, Kim, Do-Bong, Park, Myung-Hee, Yoon, Soo-Jin, Choi, Sung-Eun, Choi, Young-Sim, Koh, Su-Jin
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creator Kang, Kyung-Ah
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description Spirituality is a fundamental, intrinsic aspect of human beings and should be a core component of quality palliative care. There is an urgent need to train hospice palliative care teams (HPCTs) to enhance their ability to provide spiritual care. This study aimed to develop and evaluate a meaning-centered, spiritual care training program (McSCTP) for HPCTs (McSCTP-HPCTs). The modules' content was informed by Viktor Frankl's meaning-centered logotherapy with its emphasis on spiritual resources, as well as the spiritual care model of the Interprofessional Spiritual Care Education Curriculum (ISPEC). Following development, we conducted a pilot test with four nurses. We used the results to inform the final program, which we tested in an intervention involving 13 members of HPCTs. We took measurements using self-administered questionnaires at three points before and after the intervention. Using descriptive statistics, the Mann-Whitney U test, and the Kruskal-Wallis test, we analyzed the participants' demographic and career-related characteristics, as well as the degree of variance between three outcome variables: compassion fatigue (CF), spiritual care competencies (SCCs), and spiritual care therapeutics (SCT). We divided the McSCTP-HPCTs into five modules. Module I: The HPCTs' SCC evaluation, understanding the major concepts of spiritual care and logotherapy; Modules II-IV: Meaning-centered interventions (MCIs) related to spiritual needs (existential, relational, and transcendental/religious); Module V: The process of meaning-centered spiritual care. The preliminary evaluation revealed significant differences in all three outcome variables at the posttest point (CF, p = 0.037; SCCs, p = 0.005; SCT, p = 0.002). At the four-week follow-up test point, we only found statistical significance with the SCCs (p = 0.006). The McSCTP-HPCTs is suitable for use in clinical settings and provides evidence for assessing the SCCs of HPCTs.
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There is an urgent need to train hospice palliative care teams (HPCTs) to enhance their ability to provide spiritual care. This study aimed to develop and evaluate a meaning-centered, spiritual care training program (McSCTP) for HPCTs (McSCTP-HPCTs). The modules' content was informed by Viktor Frankl's meaning-centered logotherapy with its emphasis on spiritual resources, as well as the spiritual care model of the Interprofessional Spiritual Care Education Curriculum (ISPEC). Following development, we conducted a pilot test with four nurses. We used the results to inform the final program, which we tested in an intervention involving 13 members of HPCTs. We took measurements using self-administered questionnaires at three points before and after the intervention. 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source Publicly Available Content Database; PubMed Central; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Caregivers
Clergy
Compassion
Curricula
Education
Euthanasia
Evaluation
Health aspects
Hospice
Hospice Care
Hospices
Humans
Illnesses
Intervention
Management
Medical personnel
Nurses
Pain
Palliative Care
Palliative treatment
Patients
Program development
Psychological aspects
Religion
Religiosity
Republic of Korea
Social workers
Spiritual exercises
Spiritual Therapies
Spirituality
Statistical significance
Teams
Training
Variables
title A meaning-centered spiritual care training program for hospice palliative care teams in South Korea: development and preliminary evaluation
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