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. 2023 Dec 1;26(4):149–159. doi: 10.14475/jhpc.2023.26.4.149

Table 4.

Spirituality-based Care Continuum (Example).

Spirituality property Spiritual strengths Spiritual needs based on spirituality attributes Expressing spiritual needs Spiritual matters Intervention goals Spiritual intervention Spiritual assessment (6-point scale) End result
Key Aspects Example
Meaning and purpose • Meaning of life
• Trying to find meaning
• Love
• Gratitude
• Compassion/Forgiveness
• Beliefs or beliefs
• Tranquility
• Acceptance
• Hope for the afterlife
Existential needs (the need to find purpose and meaning in life) • No hope for future health and life
• State of hopelessness
• “My life is getting shorter and shorter”
• “There is no reason for me to live”
• “I don’t want to live”
• “I don’t know what lies ahead of me”
Despair and hopelessness Finding hope and meaning (Hope) • Help the patient express their feelings of hopelessness and listen and empathize with them.
• Try to have conversations that take the weight of reality off the patient’s shoulders.
• Help to find ways to make the patient’s time count.
• Find something to do together that will motivate the patient’s (e.g., create a bucket list).
Regain motivation through hope and finding meaning. Spiritual well-being
• Lack of meaning
• Questions about the meaning of one’s existence
• Questions about the meaning of pain
• Seeking spiritual help
• A sense of futility about one’s life
• Falling apart.
• desperate attitude
• Apathy, indifference, depression, helplessness
• Expression of futility
• One’s own worthlessness
• “My life (my life) is meaningless”
• “I feel useless”
• “What’s the point of living like this?”
• “It’s all for nothing”
• “I don’t know what the future holds”
• “Why do I have to be so sick?”
Lack of meaning and purpose Finding hope and meaning (Meaning of suffering) • Listen when the patient expresses skepticism about the value of life.
• Help the patient gain awareness of reality through listening and counseling.
• Inform the patient that their life has meaning and purpose.
• Provide opportunities for visits by family and friends who are meaningful to the patient.
• Confirm that the patient is worthy of care through warm physical support.
Find hope and rewarding meaning.