• In a review of forty-three studies, Rew and Wong (2006) found that religiosity and spirituality are important correlates of adolescent health with 84% of the literature indicating a positive correlation. (wikipedia.org)
  • To compare the religiosity and spirituality among adolescents abusing a psychoactive substance and those not abusing psychoactive substances in a Nigerian hospital Methods: This was a cross-sectional descriptive study conducted among adolescent patients admitted to the drug rehabilitation unit and adolescents attending the General Outpatient Department of the ABUAD Multisystem Hospital, Ado-Ekiti. (bvsalud.org)
  • The prevalence of high religiosity and spirituality among respondents not abusing psychoactive substances was 62.9% and 62.6% respectively, while the level of high spirituality and religiosity among respondents abusing psychoactive substances was 53.0% and 49.1% respectively. (bvsalud.org)
  • The SBI-15R was designed to measure religious and spiritual beliefs and practices, and the social support derived from a community sharing those beliefs. (nih.gov)
  • The research team identified four domains comprised of 35 items that make up spiritual and religious beliefs and practices. (nih.gov)
  • A principal components analysis with varimax rotation of the SBI-54 identified two factors, in contrast to the four which were hypothesized, one measuring spiritual beliefs and practices, the other measuring social support related to the respondent's religious community. (nih.gov)
  • Different traditions, beliefs, and practices surrounding death are common to all cultures and religions, and they have resulted in conflict regarding anatomic dissections and postmortem examinations. (medscape.com)
  • Additionally, some religions have practices that may include the use of metallic mercury. (cdc.gov)
  • Health personnel shall respect traditional and/or ancestral medical systems, the development of their own models of care and shall seek to articulate the provision of health services with the practices of traditional and/or ancestral medicine, thus making it possible to respond to the needs of indigenous peoples, Afro-descendants and others in their socio-cultural context and in the territory they inhabit. (bvsalud.org)
  • Mystical, religious, or spiritual practices performed for health benefit. (bvsalud.org)
  • Spirituality tends to improve mental health. (wikipedia.org)
  • therefore, including religion and spirituality-based (R/S) therapies may help provide person-centered mental health care. (2minutemedicine.com)
  • Studies were included if patients were 18 years or older, had a diagnosed mental health disorder according to the DSM or ICD manuals, were treated in mental health care settings, compared psychotherapy treatments with a specific religious or spiritual component to an active control group, and included quantifiable data regarding the mental health disorder that was being examined, including symptoms and functioning. (2minutemedicine.com)
  • Spirituality and religiosity have been recognized by literature as having a possible role in stabilizing good physical and mental health. (bvsalud.org)
  • The number of American medical schools teaching courses on spirituality in medicine was only three in 1995, but grew to 40 by 1998, and reached 100 in 2001. (iands.org)
  • With In a response to the proposal made by the the foundation of the faculty of Medicine president of the Islamic Republic of Iran in in Tehran University in 1934, education in September 1998, the United Nations Ge- medical ethics comprised a part of medical neral Assembly declared 2001 as the year of student education courses [ 8 ]. (who.int)
  • Dr. David Kessler, the former FDA commissioner who is now dean of the Yale University School of Medicine, warns: "If the criteria to be on an advisory committee are based on a political litmus test, that will set this country back. (tampabay.com)
  • 1. In this meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials, religion and spirituality-based (R/S) therapies were found to be moderately more efficacious at post-treatment and follow-up compared to non-R/S treatments. (2minutemedicine.com)
  • Other therapies understand "illness as a way" (according to Dethlefsen/Dahlke) and try to find the spiritual causes of migraine. (unexplained-mysteries.com)
  • Such typical therapies of which successes in migraine treatment have been reported are e.g. acupuncture and acupressure, homoeopathy, meditation, Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP), sensory deprivation, shiatsu, yoga, autogenic training as well as prayers and spirituality in general. (unexplained-mysteries.com)
  • Nor is anyone advised against visiting doctors, taking medicine or undergoing therapies or operations. (bruno-groening.org)
  • The authors proposed this scale to address the need for greater exploration of spiritual and religious beliefs in QOL, stress and coping research. (nih.gov)
  • The SBI-15R may have value in measuring religious and spiritual beliefs as a potentially mediating variable in coping with life-threatening illness, and in the measurement of QOL. (nih.gov)
  • If someone uses negative spiritual coping, the positive health benefits will not happen and the individual's health may be influenced negatively (see religious/spiritual coping section). (wikipedia.org)
  • However, the efficacy of these approaches in patients who identify as religious/spiritual is not well understood. (2minutemedicine.com)
  • Studies were excluded if they used a religious or spiritual intervention focused on mindfulness, meditation, or yoga. (2minutemedicine.com)
  • Nonetheless, the study demonstrated that for those with a religious/spiritual affiliation, R/S treatments may be helpful in managing mental illness. (2minutemedicine.com)
  • It is recognized by now that religious people generally enjoy more quality of life, live more healthily and longer and tend less to depression and suicide provided that it is a religion which emphasizes positive human values like love, justice, welfare, freedom, etc. (unexplained-mysteries.com)
  • Approaches like the latter are isolated from their cultural and religious roots by the Western complementary and alternative medicine and directed against migraine. (unexplained-mysteries.com)
  • A religious experience (sometimes known as a spiritual experience, sacred experience, or mystical experience) is a subjective experience which is interpreted within a religious framework. (wikipedia.org)
  • Although cultural or religious beliefs are often cited as a reason for opposition to autopsy, most religions and cultures find autopsy acceptable on the basis of either the individual's beliefs or under what are deemed to be special circumstances. (medscape.com)
  • 3] Certain religions have objections to autopsy (eg, Islam, Judaism) in that bodily intrusion violates the sanctity of keeping the human body complete, despite those religious doctrines not strictly forbidding it. (medscape.com)
  • Written by internationally renowned scholars, this Companion maps the moral teachings of the world s religions, and alsocharts new directions for work in the field of religious ethics. (lu.se)
  • Traditionally, spirituality has resided and been contained within religious frameworks but while the links between the two areas are still acknowledged by many in the contemporary world, spirituality is perceived by some as an aspect of human life that is distinct from religion. (lu.se)
  • One outcome is the renewed interest in the religious, spiritual and moral dimensions of education throughout the life cycle. (lu.se)
  • Embedded within the chapters is also an agenda for the future, where the religious, moral and spiritual dimensions in education are proposed as an exciting and challenging way forward for educators at all levels in society. (lu.se)
  • The Amhara region leads in cultural and religious sites in Ethiopia, with its churches and holy water sites attracting thousands of pilgrims seeking spiritual cleansing and physical healing. (who.int)
  • And to make a point that I have already mentioned, double blind, randomized, controlled trials on many aspects of spiritual medicine are now being conducted. (iands.org)
  • Turlington spoke with Beliefnet about growing up Catholic, taking up yoga, attending New York University at 29 to earn a BA in comparative religions and philosophy, and working to educate young men and women about the dangers of smoking. (beliefnet.com)
  • Then, luck was interwoven with religion, philosophy and politics. (lu.se)
  • This is the first book that provides access to twelve Continental philosophers and the consequences of their thinking for the philosophy of religion. (lu.se)
  • As such, it provides challenging questions about the way forward for philosophy of religion in the twenty-first century. (lu.se)
  • In 1999, the British Psychological Society, the main academic psychological institution in the U.K., started a section on transpersonal (spiritual) psychology. (iands.org)
  • Focusing on the Hebrew text, and with the help of life-cycle psychology and cultural anthropology, the author argues that the 'sacrifice of the most beloved son' must be viewed not as an isolated act, but against the background of his personal and spiritual development, using the Biblical text as a life history. (rowman.com)
  • In the United States multidimensional concept used by various disciplines, of America and Europe, the concept of good death was including medicine, psychology, theology, sociology widely used in the 1960s and 1970s as a key element for and anthropology ( 6 , 7 ). (who.int)
  • In 2000, Oxford University Press published the Handbook of Religion and Health . (iands.org)
  • Allopathic medical professionals in developed nations have started to collaborate with traditional, complementary, and alternative medicine (TCAM) to enquire on the role of religion/spirituality (r/s) in patient care. (researchgate.net)
  • Majority in both groups (75 % of TCAM and 84.6 % of allopathic practitioners) believed that patients' spiritual focus increases with illness. (researchgate.net)
  • 87 % of TCAM and 73 % of allopaths believed spiritual healing to be beneficial and complementary to allopathic medical care. (researchgate.net)
  • Both TCAM (81.8 %) and allopathic (63.7 %) professionals agree that spirituality as an academic subject merits inclusion in health education programs (p = 0.0003). (researchgate.net)
  • Inclusion of spirituality in the health care system is a need for Indian medical professionals as well as their patients, and it could form the basis for integrating TCAM and allopathic medical systems in India. (researchgate.net)
  • Whether and how religion and spirituality training are critical components of students' and clinicians' development of cultural humility is one important set of questions explored in the July issue of the AMA Journal of Ethics® ( @JournalofEthics ). (ama-assn.org)
  • Within the Sacchedina hermeneutical approach,[1] it can be interpreted that the Islamic duty to protect life/nonmaleficence,[2] establishes the ethics foundation for the practice of medicine by Muslim physicians. (medicineandreligion.com)
  • 3 The study of ART introduces students to the essentials in science, medicine, law, and ethics that form the law of reproductive technologies. (americanbar.org)
  • known as Haly Abbas to the Europeans, Recent major biomedical activities authored a book on medicine entitled Kamil in the Islamic Republic of Iran, with the al-tana'at al-tebbiyah (The complete medi- emphasis on medical ethics, are reviewed cal art). (who.int)
  • Spirituality often emphasizes the integration of mind, body and spirit, and it can provide a sense of purpose or life significance. (wikipedia.org)
  • Or do technical concerns precede the psychological and spiritual healing such interventions are intended to provide? (medicineandreligion.com)
  • I explore the role of the Muslim physician in healing and caregiving as worship and the patient as a means toward physician spirituality. (medicineandreligion.com)
  • Bay Area Jewish Healing Center is dedicated to providing Jewish spiritual care to those living with illness, to those caring for the ill, and to the bereaved through direct service, education and training, and information and referral. (idealist.org)
  • Spiritual Healing: Scientific Validation of a Healing Revolution. (iands.org)
  • A Secularist Construction of Spiritual Healing in Medical Literature. (uni-muenchen.de)
  • Spirituality and healing. (beliefnet.com)
  • In 1979 she founded the Circle of Friends, which had the task of preserving Bruno Gröning's spiritual legacy for posterity and offering people the possibility of obtaining help and healing. (bruno-groening.org)
  • Now led by Dieter Häusler, Grete Häusler's son, the Bruno Gröning Circle of Friends is today one of the largest associations for spiritual healing in the world. (bruno-groening.org)
  • Spiritual and lay healing / Philippa Pullar. (who.int)
  • This is the indigenous peoples' own spiritual knowledge, practiced culturally for thousands of years and transmitted through generations by the spiritual authorities, allowing the physical and cultural existence of the indigenous peoples. (bvsalud.org)
  • This work hopes to challenge the spiritual motivations in the practice of medicine as "worship through service," and explore ways of promoting a mutual spiritual value between giver and recipient. (medicineandreligion.com)
  • According to the principles that guide my practice of medicine, I cannot withhold life-saving treatment from any patient-especially antibiotic therapy and temporary dialysis, both treatments with uncontroversial efficacy. (ama-assn.org)
  • Spirituality reduces the likelihood of illness and is strongly related to increased longevity. (wikipedia.org)
  • To unveil spirituality in the care process of nursing professionals in the hospital context under the lens of Transpersonal Caring. (bvs.br)
  • The Systematization of Spiritual Nursing Care and Transpersonal Caring stand out as appropriate devices, which provide consistent subsidies for undertaking spiritual care. (bvs.br)
  • Desvelar la espiritualidad en el proceso de cuidado de los profesionales de enfermería en el contexto hospitalario bajo las lentes del Cuidado Transpersonal. (bvs.br)
  • Estudio descriptivo-exploratorio del abordaje cualitativo realizado con profesionales del equipo de enfermería en un hospital general da Bahia a través de entrevista semiestructurada sometida a la técnica de análisis del contenido y analizada a la luz del referencial teórico de la Teoría del Cuidado Transpersonal. (bvs.br)
  • What role should religion and spirituality play in patient care? (ama-assn.org)
  • spirituality plays a role in their emotional and mental capacity to handle challenges they face and practice health-promoting behaviors. (wikipedia.org)
  • The role of prayer in medicine is beginning to be taken so seriously that, in a recent issue of one of the major journals of cardiology, an author raised the question of whether every hospital in this country and in the United Kingdom should have prayer groups for patients in hospital. (iands.org)
  • The role of spirituality in medicine has become a legitimate and frequent subject of empirical research. (iands.org)
  • Things have changed for the better regarding serious inquiry into, and acceptance of, the role of spirituality in medicine. (iands.org)
  • Product description: What role should religion play in a religiously pluralistic liberal society? (lu.se)
  • plays an important role in all religions, societies and A good death is influenced by the culture of cultures ( 3 ). (who.int)
  • And in the year 2000, a number of us were able to persuade the Royal College of Psychiatrists to bring in a special interest group in spiritual psychiatry. (iands.org)
  • There is a need to develop better interaction/spiritual care skills by nursing professionals in the challenging context of the search for meaning, faith and hope mobilized by the disease experience. (bvs.br)
  • Death reflects the sociocultural identity communities, religion, and the individual's experience of and belonging of the individual to society ( 4 ). (who.int)
  • This paper will look at the 30 year experience of the author as a practicing physician before and after he began integrating spirituality in his medical practice. (medicineandreligion.com)
  • In the Religion and Spirituality Scholarly Concentration, medical students will be introduced to major spiritual traditions, spiritual concepts in health, and the ways they interact. (iupui.edu)
  • Alex Lion, DO, and Mona Raed, MD, share details on the new Religion and Spirituality Scholarly Concentration, in which medical students will be introduced to major spiritual traditions, spiritual concepts in health, and the ways they interact. (iupui.edu)
  • 2 Minute Medicine® is an award winning, physician-run, expert medical media company. (2minutemedicine.com)
  • Dr. William C. Becker is a general internist with clinical epidemiology, addiction medicine and pain management training, whose research, educational and clinical efforts broadly aim to improve the quality of chronic pain treatment in general medical settings, especially in the complex overlap of chronic pain and opioid use disorder. (yale.edu)
  • In the past 10 years, medical professionals have gone from looking upon spirituality with a skeptical if not cynical eye, to embracing it enthusiastically. (iands.org)
  • The new generation of doctors that are now qualifying has had spirituality ingrained at an early stage in their medical training. (iands.org)
  • Herbert Benson, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and founder of the Mind/Body Medical Institute at Boston's Deaconess Hospital has also written extensively on this subject. (beliefnet.com)
  • Course sessions will be led by a spiritually diverse faculty, with discussion of spiritual traditions preferentially led by leaders within those traditions. (iupui.edu)
  • The authors address specific and highly contested issues as assisted suicide, stem cell research, cloning, reproductive health, and alternative medicine as well as more general questions such as who legitimately speaks for religion in public bioethics, what religion can add to our understanding of justice, and the value of faith-based contributions to healthcare. (lu.se)
  • It was found that the nursing team perceives the patient and family's demand for spiritual care, and sometimes even has experiences and suggestions for interventions, especially those which cultivate faith and spirituality, but this does not happen with most of these professionals who demonstrate difficulties, unpreparedness and fear of taking on such care responsibility. (bvs.br)
  • It intends to examine the phenomenon of the migraine aura from the spiritual view and therefore to understand migraine as a physical and spiritual condition which corresponds to lived spirituality and, from there, is accessible and changeable. (unexplained-mysteries.com)
  • Spirituality is characterized as something experienced personally, an individualized process that involves personal or private beliefs. (wikipedia.org)
  • Religion, like spirituality, can provide people a sense of purpose or meaning through personal beliefs. (wikipedia.org)
  • 1] People from more westernized or diverse environments tend to have less cohesive connections with traditions, religion, and beliefs, and have a greater acceptance of autopsies. (medscape.com)
  • Meanwhile, some orthodox practitioners have changed their minds, too, and have started to use alternative spiritual methods as an accompanying measure against migraine, like including spiritual questions into the treatment of patients or even mentioning spiritual aspects of migraine. (unexplained-mysteries.com)
  • Spirituality is associated with lower rates of suicide, anxiety disorders, and depression. (wikipedia.org)
  • Generally, it is acknowledged that religions regulate the feelings of the people and therefore have an effect on the immune system and the psyche. (unexplained-mysteries.com)
  • 3. That prayer or inner communion with the spirit thereof-be that spirit 'God' or 'law'-is a process wherein work is really done, and spiritual energy flows in and produces effects, psychological or material, within the phenomenal world. (dead.net)
  • The relationship between the patient and physician still presents the issue of asymmetric spiritual gains, where the physician gains spiritually by "saving" a life, but the "saved" patient gains only in the material/physical sense. (medicineandreligion.com)
  • Spirituality affects both mental and physical health outcomes in the general United States population across different ethnic groups. (wikipedia.org)
  • Spiritual wellbeing has been associated with positive physical health outcomes in research. (wikipedia.org)
  • The reason for the physical effect of religion and spirituality is not cleared in detail yet since it has to be looked for in the complex relationship of body and mind. (unexplained-mysteries.com)
  • Yoga is a spiritual practice that has incredible physical benefits. (beliefnet.com)
  • Back as far as 1990, over 250 studies have shown that religion plays a significant outcome in physical health. (beliefnet.com)
  • They do demonstrate a clear connection between spirituality and a corresponding physical and emotional health. (beliefnet.com)
  • This book discusses the adult development of the Biblical Patriarch, Abraham, as a 'Spiritual Revolutionary' (based on Genesis 11-25). (rowman.com)
  • The didactic components provide a strong academic and experiential foundation in religion and spirituality that will be vital for completion of the core curriculum project and product. (iupui.edu)
  • Insights: While presenting excessive and unnecessary patient characteristics in examination questions should be avoided, the absence of many diversity aspects may reduce examination authenticity and defeat the teaching of diversity in medicine. (lu.se)
  • Spirituality does not have a clear definition, though it is generally regarded as the search for and experience of the sacred, meaning God, a higher power, or something of divine nature. (wikipedia.org)
  • Do you approach Yoga as a fitness regimen or a spiritual practice? (beliefnet.com)
  • Join me as I, JJ DiGeronimo, interview many lightworker friends who provide fantastic insight into a collective quest for spiritual growth and illumination! (tunein.com)
  • the patient serves as the physician's means to a spiritual end. (medicineandreligion.com)
  • First, I examine motivation and whether the physician's spiritual relationship to the patient is instrumental versus pure means. (medicineandreligion.com)
  • I argue that the patient is being used instrumentally, not purely as a means, by the physician to achieve dual spiritual ends of "worship through service" (personal motivation) as well as the patient's end of being healed (social motivation). (medicineandreligion.com)
  • promotes the articulation of activities between health professionals and traditional medicine, under the concept of complementarity and with the use of norms and agreements that guarantee timely and quality care for the population, and respect for the decisions of individuals and communities. (bvsalud.org)
  • This study has spirituality in the hospital nursing care context as its theme. (bvs.br)
  • Because of the nuanced definitions of spirituality and religiosity, the literature on spirituality is not consistent in definitions or measures resulting in a lack of coherence. (wikipedia.org)
  • Because of the nebulous definition of spirituality in the literature, measures are not consistent across different studies resulting in a lack of coherence in the literature. (wikipedia.org)