keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22495717/is-the-spiritual-life-of-cancer-patients-a-resource-to-be-taken-into-account-by-professional-caregivers-from-the-time-of-diagnosis
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Guido Miccinesi, Tullio Proserpio, Maria Adelaide Pessi, Alice Maruelli, Andrea Bonacchi, Claudia Borreani, Carla Ripamonti
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Spiritual life can be defined as the search for personal contact with the transcendent. Careful assessment of spiritual life can help to value its importance to cancer patients from the moment of their diagnosis. METHODS: This is a cross-sectional study. Two hundred fifty-seven patients undergoing cancer treatment filled in the validated Italian version of the Systems of Belief Inventory (SBI-15R). Patients were also asked to attribute themselves to one of the following, mutually exclusive categories: believer and churchgoer, believer but no churchgoer, and non-believer...
January 2012: Tumori
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22122626/review-of-whole-person-healthcare-volumes-1-2-3-2007
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard Harvey
Reviews the book, Whole person healthcare, Volumes 1, 2, & 3 by I. A. Serlin, M. A. DiCowden, K. Rockefeller, S. Brown, J. Sonke-Henderson, R. Brandman, and J. Graham-Pole (2007). With the more-than-1,000-page tour de force titled Whole Person Healthcare, Ilene Serlin, current president of the San Francisco Psychological Association, has purposefully edited a three-volume series aimed at humanizing the fields of psychotherapy and health care. Throughout the series, all of the authors carry the message that integrative treatment strategies in psychotherapy and health care are more valuable than reductionist "treat the symptom rather than the person" approaches as a way to humanize patient-client interaction...
June 2009: Psychotherapy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20681092/new-streams-of-religion-fly-fishing-as-a-lived-religion-of-nature
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samuel Snyder
Fly fishers around the world frequently use terms such as religious, spiritual, sacred, divine, ritual, meditation, and conversion to describe their personal angling experiences. Further, drawing upon religious terminology, anglers will refer to rivers as their church and to nature as sacred. Often these latter pronouncements drive a concern for the conservation of these sacred spaces as evidenced by participation in both local and national conservation organizations. Informed by theoretical perspectives offered by religious studies, particularly "lived religion" and "religion and nature," I shall trace a few of the historical, material, and everyday elements of fly fishers and their subcultures, demonstrating along the way the insights that come by understanding fly fishing as a religious practice, which can, at times, drive an ethic of environmental conservation...
2007: Journal of the American Academy of Religion
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20091636/massage-therapy-for-people-with-hiv-aids
#24
REVIEW
Susan L Hillier, Quinette Louw, Linzette Morris, Jeanine Uwimana, Sue Statham
BACKGROUND: Infection with human immunodeficency virus (HIV) and acquired immunodeficency syndrome (AIDS) is a pandemic that has affected millions of people globally. Although major research and clinical initiatives are addressing prevention and cure strategies, issues of quality of life for survivors have received less attention. Massage therapy is proposed to have a positive effect on quality of life and may also have a positive effect on immune function through stress mediation. OBJECTIVES: The objective of this systematic review was to examine the safety and effectiveness of massage therapy on quality of life, pain and immune system parameters in people living with HIV/AIDS...
2010: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19533506/spiritual-well-being-depressive-symptoms-and-immune-status-among-women-living-with-hiv-aids
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Safiya George Dalmida, Marcia McDonnell Holstad, Colleen Diiorio, Gary Laderman
Spirituality is a resource some HIV-positive women use to cope with HIV, and it also may have positive impact on physical health. This cross-sectional study examined associations of spiritual well-being, with depressive symptoms, and CD4 cell count and percentages among a non-random sample of 129 predominantly African-American HIV-positive women. Significant inverse associations were observed between depressive symptoms and spiritual well-being (r = -.55, p = .0001), and its components, existential well-being (r = -...
March 2009: Women & Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17059116/spiritual-healing-of-disrupted-childhood
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
James B Gould
This essay suggests ways in which spiritual resources--healing stories, psalms of lament and reassurance, rituals, and meditative practices--can be used to foster emotional and spiritual healing for people, such as the adult children of missionaries, who have experienced disrupted relationships with parents during childhood.
2006: Journal of Pastoral Care & Counseling: JPCC
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16757790/a-qualitative-examination-of-a-spiritually-based-intervention-and-self-management-in-the-workplace
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
T Anne Richards, Doug Oman, John Hedberg, Carl E Thoresen, Jeanne Bowden
This qualitative study assesses the experience of an intervention that provided spiritually based self-management tools to hospital-based nurses. Drawing on wisdom traditions of the major world religions, the eight point program can be practiced by adherents to any religious faith, or those outside of all traditions. Five of eight program points were perceived as directly useful in improving the nurses' workplace interactions and enhancing fulfillment of compassionate caregiving missions. The findings suggest that this program can be an effective intervention among nurses in dealing with the demands of the healthcare environment and may be a resource for continuing education curricula...
July 2006: Nursing Science Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16257802/spirituality-among-young-women-at-risk-for-eating-disorders
#28
COMPARATIVE STUDY
M Joy Jacobs-Pilipski, Andrew Winzelberg, Denise E Wilfley, Susan W Bryson, C Barr Taylor
OBJECTIVE: This study examined the spiritual and religious (S/R) beliefs and practices of college-age women at high-risk for eating disorders, and the relationship between body image distress, coping, and S/R. METHOD: Two hundred fifty-five college-age women with elevated weight and shape concerns, assessed using the Weight/Shape Concerns Scale and the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE), completed surveys about their S/R beliefs and practices. RESULTS: Women with strong S/R beliefs and practices cope with body dissatisfaction differently than women without strong S/R beliefs...
December 2005: Eating Behaviors
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15105961/in-search-of-inner-wisdom-guided-mindfulness-meditation-in-the-context-of-suicide
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Liora Birnbaum, Aiton Birnbaum
Spiritual concerns are highly relevant, but often ignored, in psychotherapy in general and in suicide in particular. This article presents Internet data and clinical case material bearing on the topic, and describes an innovative therapeutic intervention administered in a group-workshop format with suicide survivors and mental health professionals. The technique incorporates relaxation and mindfulness meditation, with the addition of guided meditation in search of inner wisdom. Results of the group intervention are described and illustrated...
March 18, 2004: TheScientificWorldJournal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/14698692/regulation-religious-experience-and-epilepsy-a-lens-on-complementary-therapies
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael H Cohen
Complementary and alternative medical (CAM) therapies include chiropractic, acupuncture and traditional Oriental medicine, massage therapy, and herbal remedies; mind-body therapies (such as meditative practices and visualization); and folk practices and religious healing. Of these, modalities based on spiritual healing create a number of conundrums for the clinician, including legal, regulatory, and ethical issues. Further, the historic relationship between the study of epilepsy and religious experience suggests particular, potential associations between CAM therapies (and especially spiritual healing) and care for epileptic patients...
December 2003: Epilepsy & Behavior: E&B
https://read.qxmd.com/read/12776477/religious-and-spiritual-resources-cam-and-conventional-treatment-in-the-lives-of-cancer-patients
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yvonne Tatsumura, Gertraud Maskarinec, Dianne M Shumay, Hisako Kakai
CONTEXT: In addition to seeking conventional treatment from physicians, cancer patients will often use religious and spiritual resources (RSR) and complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). Patients' beliefs about the relationships among RSR, CAM, and conventional treatments may reflect belief systems not readily apparent to physicians. OBJECTIVE: 1) Identify the RSR used and explore themes in beliefs regarding RSR, CAM, and conventional treatment. 2) Investigate the nature of the relationships among RSR, CAM, and conventional treatment in the lives of cancer patients...
May 2003: Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/10178082/assessing-spirituality-healthcare-organizations-must-address-their-employees-spiritual-needs
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
W Bazan, D Dwyer
Catholic institutions need to respond to their managers, physicians, and other employees experiencing deep pain about the meaning and purpose of life. Initial approaches to people in spiritual distress include "tough love", codependence, and assistance programs, along with prayer and compassion. But a different approach that gives people the space and freedom to pursue their spiritual search and ask questions to discover deeper meaning in life may be more effective. It allows them to accept that they are where they need to be on their spiritual journey, even if that place is painful...
March 1998: Health Progress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/1200175/on-research-in-zen
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
E T Shimano, D B Douglas
Zen is one of several mental or spiritual disciplines that have become the object of recent scientific interest and theory. The authors discuss several aspects of Zen, such as the psychophysiological effects of meditation and the general impact of enlightenment, that are potential areas of fruitful research. They stress, however, that researchers can gain true understanding of the different perception and experience of reality to which Zen gives access only by practicing Zen meditation themselves. Without such understanding, the planning and interpretation of research will inevitably be in error and a resource of the greatest potential value misused...
December 1975: American Journal of Psychiatry
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