Clients and PatientsâÃâ¬Ã⢠Spiritual Nursing Diagnosis of the Sound Heart Model
Received: 05-Dec-2017 / Accepted Date: 21-Dec-2017 / Published Date: 28-Dec-2017 DOI: 10.4172/2161-0711.1000581
Abstract
Aim: Holistic nursing provide postural care by assessing clients and patients’ bio-psycho-socio-spiritual reactions, which could harm spiritual health due to interruption in communications with God, self, people and nature. The purpose of this study is designing and validating clients and patients’ spiritual nursing diagnosis of the Sound Heart Model.
Methods: This is a “developmental research” with Sound Heart Model approach, which was done on students at the faculty of nursing and hospitalized patients of Baqiyatallah in 2016. The inductive propositions were extracted by using conventional content analysis, through interviews with clients and patients, their families and clinical nurses. Two focus group were used, besides the individual interviews to approve the validity of data. The religious evidence, were investigated systematically and deductively. The spiritual diagnosis based on religious evidence were compared with propositions stated by the participants, the list of nursing diagnosis of NANDA, and spiritual health assessment questionnaire (25 cases). 76 spiritual diagnosis were classified into four communicational domains. Applicability was assessed through two focused group discussions with the comments of 20 experienced nurses.
Results: safety from divine wisdom, neglecting and forgetfulness of God in healthy clients, and the frustration of God's mercy with fear, suspicion, future anxiety, sadness of losing health in patients, were the most important spiritual nursing diagnoses. Disruption of communication with God causes disturbance in other person's communication.
Conclusion: The Sound Heart Nursing Care Model provide postural care at all levels of prevention. Failure to pay attention to the spiritual problems affects physical, mental, and social health.
Keywords: Clients; Patients; Spiritual; Nursing diagnosis
Introduction
Holistic nursing is responsible for caring of clients and patients, throughout their life, from birth to death, at all levels of prevention [1], by diagnosing, treating and taking care of the bio-psycho-sociospiritual reactions to actual and potential health problems [2]. The professional performance of nursing is based on its theoretical knowledge, through nursing care models, which is influenced by the philosophical perspective of theorists, who define how to take care of clients and patients [3,4]. The effect of philosophy (ontology), on people’s culture and lifestyle, mood, behaviors, health habits, meaning of events, perception of health and sickness, selecting treatment and care models is different in every culture and society [5-7], that represents: people of every society, have their own spiritual responses to stress or diseases, based on their philosophical attitudes toward the world [8]. Reaction to disease varies from person to person, such as: an unfair event from God that causes dissatisfaction with fate, a challenge that has a solution, a factor for future anxiety or sadness of losing health, the reason for creating a sense of revenge from the cause of disease with frustration, or vice versa: time for rest and care with the hope to spend the course of disease, easily [9]. Distinctive differences in the response of different patients to the disease emphasize the necessity of community-oriented care [10]. The WHO emphasizes the consideration of clients and patients' values and beliefs [11]. An essential element of holistic nursing is assessing client and patients' bio-psycho-social-spiritual reactions (Figure 1) [12].
The uncertainty of life events and incidence of diseases, create spiritual needs that necessitate spiritual care [5]. The Sound Heart model is a spiritual care model from Abrahamic religions viewpoint, which accepts the spirit in human beings as the default and define the soul (heart) as the “spiritual, gentle, divine, identifier, wise and mighty essence that is assigned by God, is the place of emotions which perceives the surrounding environment, is addressed by God for His reward and punishment [13]. The soul gives existence to human and has capable of perceiving, feeling, moving, reasoning, and determining [14,15]. The Holy Quran attributes three items of perceptions, emotions, and acts to the heart, which result from one another; as perceptions cause emotions which result in acts. Among these three dimensions, perception is the essential component, emotion and action originate from perception. Some hadiths have interpreted the heart as wisdom [16,17]. Unfortunately, the global care models have ignored clients and patients’ soul [18]. Although the spiritual distress as a nursing diagnosis was accepted of NANDA in 1988 [19] and the parish nurses with respect the entire human being, is being practiced in various communities in the U.S.A with regard spirituality as” a key aspect” of health and treatment [20] but because of the inductive epistemological method [21], theories and models of nursing care could not assess the immaterial (spiritual) dimension of the human [22] for this reason, spiritual diagnosis have been neglected. Regarding the necessity of using revelation epistemology to recognize human’s divine soul, belonging to the unseen world, besides examining clients and patients’ spiritual responses to stress and illness, the purpose of this study is designing and validating clients and patients’ spiritual nursing diagnosis of the Sound Heart Model.
Materials and Methods
First, Vienna’s Psychotherapy perspectives, systemic theory and homeostasis, quantum theory and the rules of physics, humans’ needs and characteristics of a perfect human in psychology as assumptions of nursing care models, and over 35 nursing care models from the development of these models up to 2015 were analyzed [23] as follows:
• Seven global care models were analyzed based on total ratio analysis that can be compared with perceptual analysis and communication analysis of Carly (1992) in nursing [18].
• Metaparadigmatic concepts of the model (human, health, environment, disease, care) were defined. The concept of soul was derived from paradigm of Abrahamic religions, and the concept of sound heart (spiritual health) was derived from Quran and hadiths based on Walker Avant’s adoption of the concept method [24].
• The Sound Heart model was developed regarding the core concept by using grounded theory method [25].
• To examine the concept of sound heart in real situations and define experimental parameters and themes of the concept, inductive propositions were extracted by using the conventional content analysis [26]. The data collection instruments included an in-depth semi-structured interview containing open-ended questions and the focus group discussion.
The individual interview
After obtaining the informed written consent and approval of the university ethics committee, by protecting the privacy of the participants, they were selected through targeted sampling and invited for individual in-depth semi-structured interviews. Demographic information, including age, marital status, social support systems, and comorbidities were collected from participants. The researcher ran a pilot study to familiarize with the potential unpredicted problems and to develop the questions. Some of the questions for beginning the interview were as follows:
• Please talk about your feelings and emotions about your current disease or stressors.
• What are the emotions caused by the situation? How do you cope with the emotions?
• When do you feel emotionally relaxed and secure?
• Has the situation caused adverse emotions and feelings in you? Why have such emotions and feelings happened?
The focus group discussion
Two focus group were used, besides the individual interviews to complete and approve the validity of data. The focus group comprised a certain number of students and patients who were not interviewed individually for the purpose of increasing the rigor and strength of the study and accuracy and comprehensiveness of the data.
Item analysis: The conventional qualitative content analysis was used to collect and analyze the data. In this analysis, the categories were determined during the item analysis. The analysis was performed through constant comparative analysis, which is a method for determining the reliability and validity of data. All participants ‘statements and expressions were transcribed verbatim, and item analysis was conducted. The three-phase coding was performed to determine scales, subscales, and items.
In the second stage: Religious evidence, were investigated and content analyzed, systematically and deductively, which were included: reliable interpretations of Quran verses relevant to the concept of illness [27-31], the explanation of Imam Shadegg’s hadith about soldiers of wisdom and ignorance [32,33], the Ham mam sermon of Nahj al-Balaghah [34], On van Basra’s hadith [35], the Holy Prophet’s conduct [36-40], and books on Islamic ethics [40-43]. In this respect, 76 spiritual diagnosis were classified into four communicational domains.
The spiritual diagnosis induced from religious evidence, propositions stated by the participants, the list of nursing diagnosis of NANDA, spiritual health assessment questionnaire (25 cases) were compared, reviewed, and classified. The content validity was assessed through the Delphi method by obtaining the opinions of 10 faculty members of different Universities. Applicability was assessed through focused group discussions with the comments of 10 experienced professors
Results
Spiritual diagnosis can be classified into two groups as follows:
• Spiritual diagnosis relevant to patients and their family
• Spiritual diagnosis relevant to clients
Although NANDA has provided the following nursing diagnosis: anxiety, death anxiety, fatigue, fear, predicted sorrow, chronic sorrow, ineffective social adaptation, social isolation, disappointment, loneliness, vulnerability, self-care inability, ineffective rejection, being offensive to self or others, disturbed protection, disturbed identity, disturbed role playing, disturbed self-confidence, disturbed selfperception, and spiritual distress, a number of religious evidence based diagnosis have been ignored in science. To perform the spiritual care by nursing process, nurses or spiritual advisors, should firstly examine clients and patients’ spiritual responses in three areas: thoughts and beliefs, moralities and emotions, and verbal and non-verbal behaviors, then detect disorders in communications with God, themselves, people, and nature. They should practice, based on evidence-based instructions and spiritual health model for reaching a sound heart [44,45].
The results of this study revealed the following diagnoses in the four domains of communication (Table 1).
The patients’ disturbed relationship with God included: 1-feeling of insecurity: arising from distrust in God’s power, wisdom and mercy 2-Hidden polytheism : considering the physician as a healer, because of lack trust in God and fail to delegate the treatment to God 3-feeling of restlessness: arising from suspicion to God 4-pessimism toward the future and fate: arising from disappointment with God’s mercy 5-Lamentation : arising from impatience 6-despair caused by disappointment with God’s mercy 7-Disobedience of God: arising from lack of affection toward God 8-Dissatisfaction with fate arising from disregarding the effect of deeds on fate 9-Failure to do obligations and insist on sins because of being angry with God for a disease (getting revenge of God) 10-Egotism and arrogance against God and people 11-Neglect of God relevant to the failure to consider His commands and be affectionate toward Him |
The clients’ disturbed relationship with God included: 1-Neglect of god 2-Doubts about religious beliefs: arising from the failure to seek religious knowledge 3-Security from God's deceit: related to unfamiliarity with God’s power and wisdom 4-Disobedience to the commands of God 5-Confidence in religion 6-Putting innovation in religion 7-Dissatisfaction with fate 8-Doing work for someone other than God 9-Lack of sincerity in practice 10-Polytheism (Shirk to God) 11-Suspicion to God |
The patients’ disturbed communication with self-included: 1-Anxiety and worry 2-Fear 3-Sorrow 4-Disappointment 5-Feeling of loneliness and helplessness 6-Thoughts of suicide 7-Self-mutilation arising from anger 8-Feeling of malaise and fatigue 9-Failure to practice hygiene 10-Sensualize arising from disregarding the role of deeds and intents in emergence of diseases 11-Inability to self-care |
The clients’ disturbed communication with self-included: 1-Debauchery and adultery 2-Selfishness 3-Self-worship 4-Arrogance and pride 5-Know yourself better than others 6-Arrogance against God 7-Greed 8-Not generous |
Disorder in communication with people included: 1-Potential damages to others: arising from anger and wrath 2-Isolation from people (social isolation) because of blaming them for the emergence of disease 3-Animosity with people: arising from the envy for their health 4-Hatred and a grudge: caused by the untreated anger and lack of forgiveness 5-Vindictiveness: because of not knowing causes of the disease and suspecting other people 6-Verbal aggression (insulting) and conflicts with others in different ways, such as finding and revealing faults with others, revealing people's secrets, deceiving, accusing and lying, blaming others, talk to people with evil epithets, gossiping, backbiting, vilifying, intriguing, and ruining the reputation of religious people arising from anger 7-Heartlessness: related to the feeling of revenging the people causing the disease 8-Feeling of guilt and embarrassment arising from the need to others’ help 9-Feeling of others’ threat arising from suspecting people 10-Breach of promises (failure to fulfill promises) and breach of trust arising from being unkind to people 11-Feeling happy with people’s mishaps, quitting relations, and disrespectful to parents arising from feelings of anger and grudge. |
Disorder in communication with people included: 1-Violation (non-fulfillment of the covenant) 2-Treason in trust 3-Exposing the secrets of the people 4-Defamation and defamation 5-Cunning with people 6-Making people disturbing 7-Slandering people 8-Pouring people's dignity 9-Lying 10-Blame the people 11-Ugly nicknames to people 12-Talk behind someone's back 13-Insults and disrespect for the people 14-Be happy in the calamity of the people 15-Harassing parents 16-Helping the tyrant 17-Unjust sentence 18-Hostility 19-Pouring honorable dignity 20-Magic and magic 21-Stealing 22-Greed 23- stinginess 24-Cruelty and brutality |
The patients’ disturbed communication with nature included: -Extravagance and wastefulness -Non-use of nature: Circulation in nature Watch the flowing water Listen to the sounds of the birds Smell fragrant flowers Use of light and heat of the sun |
The clients’ disturbed communication with nature included: Teasing animals cutting trees Contaminated water and air Destruction of nature Make noise Misuse of nature extravagance and wastefulness |
Table 1: Diagnoses in the four domains of communication.
Discussions
To fulfill pastoral care, nurses should increase their knowledge about spirituality and the influence of clients and patients’ spiritual beliefs on lifestyle, responses to stress and diseases, choice of care and treatment [46]. The spiritual care generally depends on understanding clients and patients’ spiritual beliefs and needs [47] such as: communicating with God, need to a meaningful and purposeful life, receiving and giving love, hopefulness, creativity, forgiveness and honest communication with themselves and others [48]. The spiritual evaluation addresses individuals’ perception of God or divinity, the source of power and hopefulness, the importance of religious practices, and the relationship between their personal beliefs and health status [49]. Results of other studies have shown four areas of spirituality that normally evaluated in patients as follows: fear of medical practices, sources of patients’ internal power, feeling of hopefulness, religious practices related to the surgery, but integrity, as a dimension of spiritual evaluation, has been less reported by nurses [50]. Although the goal of nursing care, is to promote health, prevent of diseases, maintain health, and relieve patients' pain and suffering, and the spiritual care is influential in reaching these goals [51] by reducing patients' stresses during their hospitalization through focusing on optimism and hope to the mercy of God, but there are still few nurses providing spiritual care [5]. Over 50% of nurses do not try to provide spiritual care to patients in practice and feel that, they are not competent enough in this regard [46]. Nurses may also feel that spiritual issues are not related to their profession but is related to clergymen [52]. For nurses interested in pastoral care, most nursing books lack, enough training materials on spiritual care practice [53,54]. Those books emphasize patients’ physical and mental needs rather than their spiritual needs [47] and do not contain much scientific materials on the spiritual dimension of nursing care [55]. None of the courses of Iranian nurses’ academic education, discusses the manner and necessity of providing spiritual care to patients or clients, and this important matter is ignored. The spiritual care teaching process in Iran, which involves the concept of patient-oriented care, is a dynamic and unsystematic process hidden in social interactions and is developed often clinically under the influence of religious, spiritual, and cultural knowledge of students, through modeling the behavior and personality of professors/trainers, and under the influence of the educational ruling atmosphere, informally without planning. The students’ clinical modeling and informal learning, occur through choosing popular individuals with spiritual attributes and good interactions.
Although Pullen introduce reasons of nurses’ failure to consider spirituality as: nurses’ low levels of spiritual consciousness, fear of affecting patients by their own beliefs, time limitations, lack of training on interventions related to spirituality in nursing. Yardley explains challenges of implementing the spiritual care as: the difficulty with determining patients’ spiritual needs, determining the person responsible for providing the spiritual care, and determining the degree of trust in accuracy of spiritual interventions. Although nursing care providers try to provide holistic care services, the evaluation of the provided care, shows patients’ dissatisfaction and neglect of their spiritual needs, which damage the patients and nursing profession irreversibly. However, the paradigm of Abrahamic religions, introduces bio-psycho-social- spiritual needs for the clients and patients and the efficient strategy of faith therapy for achieving sound heart (a peaceful soul that is confident with God, full of security and trust, love, happiness, hopefulness, satisfaction). Deep faith in God and worship, directed humans’ communications with themselves, people, and nature to sake of Allah. Religion shows the way to reach the truth, that is, closeness to God, and modifies thoughts and beliefs, moralities and emotions, and verbal and non-verbal behaviors. Religion not only determines characteristics, which are equal to morals, for a perfect human (God’s caliph) but also introduces spiritual diagnosis (humans’ responses to various difficulties). The review of existing nursing diagnoses showed that, there is no comprehensive list that can check all four individual's communication. The use of religious spirituality and divine epistemology and its rich resources can fill the gap in this regard.
Conclusion
The analysis of clients and patients’ spiritual nursing diagnosis is necessary for providing pastoral care. These are different in different cultures, based on the attitude toward health and sickness. Culture influenced by people’s philosophical attitude that results from epistemological methods, thus the analysis of clients and patients’ spiritual responses has a philosophical basis. Therefore, diagnosis of spiritual problems and pastoral care in followers of monotheistic religions, with the belief in the existence of soul, the unseen world, prophecy, and resurrection, should be performed on the basis of their philosophical attitude.
Acknowledgments
The author appreciates the honorable professors, students, patients cooperating with this study.
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
This article is taken from a research project with a code of ethics IR.BMSU.REC.1396.142 from the Ethics Committee of Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences (AJ), Iran. And there is no conflict of interest in its performance.
References
- George J (2011) Nursing theories. The base for professional nursing practice (6th edn.) Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall-International Inc.
- American Nursing Association (2015) Definition of nursing.Washington DC: American Nursing Publishing.
- Algoid MR (2014) Nursing theorists and their work. (8th edn). St. Louis: Mosby com.
- Griffith JW, Christens PJ (1982) Nursing process: application of theories, frameworks and Models.
- Cavendish R, Konecny L, Mitzeliotis C, Russo D, Luise B, et al. (2008) Spiritual care activities of nurses using nursing interventions classification (NIC) Labels Int J Nurs Terminol Classif 14: 113-124.
- al-Hashemi MH (1996) Philosophy of jurisprudence system. Cultural Center for Islamic Studies.
- Asadzandi M (2013) Analysis of nursing concepts and theories with introduce Sound Heart model (Methods of care based on Islam) Tehran: Hydrae Publications.
- Asadzandi M, Ebadi A (2013) Designing and determining psychometric properties of an inventory for analysis of patients’ spiritual responses to diseases. Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences, Tehran.
- Stanhope M, Lancaster J (2013) Foundations of nursing in the community (community -oriented practice (4th edn.).
- Kit son A, Marshall A, Bassett K, Zeitz K (2013) what are the core elements of patientâ€centered care? A narrative review and synthesis of the literature from health policy, medicine and nursing. J Adv Nurs 69: 4-15.
- Kiaei MZ, Salehi A, Nasrabadi AM, Whitehead D, Azmal M (2015) Spirituality and spiritual care in Iran: nurses' perceptions and barriers. Int Nurs Rev 62: 584-592.
- Dastgheib SA (1963) Galba Salim (Vol. 2). Qom: Dar al-Ketab Publications.
- Motahari M (1982) Introduction to Islamic world view-eternal life or the afterlife. Qom: Sadra Publications.
- Mehdizadeh H (2004) An Introduction to semantics knowledge of reason in religious interpretation, Mare fat J 4: 30-45.
- Asadzandi M (2014) Access to the sound heart identifies the concept of spiritual health.J Med Jurisprudence 6: 143-173.
- Asadzandi M (2001) Critique of nursing care models at the level of applied concepts and equations and model designing, Tehran.
- Lewis S, Bucher L, Heitkemper M, Harding MM, Kwong J (2015) Medical-surgical nursing. Assessment and Management of Clinical Problems. (10th edn) St. Louis: Mosby com.
- Ibrahim A (2007) Theoretical nursing development and progress (4th edn.) Washington: Lippincott: Williams’s com.
- Pirouzmand A (1997) Applied equations production method. Qom: Cultural Center for Islamic Studies.
- Pirouzmand A (2009) Outlining relationship between faith and science (Orientation of Science). Tehran: Jahir Publications.
- Asadzandi M (2017) Professors, spiritual characteristics for role-modeling education. J Edu Strategies in Medical 10: 23-35.
- Asadzandi M (2015) Sound heart: Spiritual nursing care model from religious viewpoint. J Relig Health 56: 2063-2075.
- Walker L, Avant K (2005) Strategies for theory construction in nursing (4th edn.) New York: Pearson Prentice Hall.
- Pouryousef A (2016) A summary interpretation of the Holy Quran, (Al-Mizan and Nemuneh). Tehran: Shahed Publications.
- Tabatabaee M (2016) Al-mizan fi tafsir al-Quran. Qom: Institute of Islamic Publications;
- Khomeini RM (2004) Al-salat customs. Tehran: Institute for Compilation and Publication of Imam Khomeini.
- Khomeini RM (2015) Description of forty hadith (hadith about forces of reason and ignorance). (14th edn). Tehran: Institute of Regulation and Publication of Imam Khomeini’s Works.
- Shahidi M (2017) Nahjol al-balagha of imam ali: Islamic revolution training puplication. Sermon of Ham mam 193: 224-228
- Gilani RR (2012) Learning, a description of on van Basra’s hadith. Soroush Publications, Tehran.
- Farahzad H (2012) The prophet mohammad’s conduct about moral beauty. Qom: Tobi-ye Publications
- Farahzad H(2011) Lifestyle of the prophet muhammad, showing affection to women and children. Qom: Tubaye Mohabbat Publications.
- Farahzad H (2013) The prophet mohammad’s conduct about love of women and children. Qom: Tobi-ye Publications.
- Qarati M (2010) The prophet mohammad’s conduct regarding Quran. Publications of the Army Ideological-Political, Tehran.
- Sharghavi H (2007) A step beyond Islamic psychology or mental health and ethics in Islam. Tehran: Islamic Culture Publication Office.
- Zomorodiyan A (1995) the truth of soul-a little knowledge about the science of soul. Tehran: Islamic Culture Publication Office.
- Asadzandi M (2017) A guide to the spiritual care of patients. Iranian Academy of Medical Sciences.
- Mazaheri M, Fallahi KM, Madah B, Rahgozar M (2008) Nurses’ attitude toward spirituality and spiritual care. Payesh Quarterly 8: 31-37.
- McSherry W, Draper P (1999) The debates emerging in the literature surrounding the concept of spirituality as applied to nursing. J Adv Nurs 27: 683- 691.
- Fulton R (1996) Spirituality and nursing education. Review of research in nursing education 7: 147-127
- Stoll RL (1999) Guidelines for spiritual assessment. Am J Nurs 9: 577-5744.
- Boutell K, Bozett F (1990) Nurse’s assessment of patient’s spirituality: Continuing education implications. J Contin Educ Nurs 21: 172-176.
- Gholamali M, Keivanzadeh M, Arjmand N (2008) The interrelationship of spirituality, occupational stress, organizational commitment, and occupational satisfaction in nurses in Tehran. J contemporary Psychology 3: 61-73.
- Tarkio M (2002) A grounded theory study of the experience of spirituality among persons living with schizophrenia The University of British Columbia 22-39.
- Andrew M, Boyle J (2003) Trans cultural concepts in nursing. (4th edn). Lippincott company.
- WHOÂ (1979) Spiritual health is important, say our readers. WHO Charon 33: 29-30
- Hemmati M, Ahmadi F, Anousheh M (2010) Spiritual beliefs and quality of life: A qualitative study from the perspective of teenage girls with diabetes. Koomesh J 12: 144-151.
- Tazakori Z, Valizadeh S, Mohamadi E, Hasankhani H (2013) The process of spiritual care learning in Iranian nursing students: A grounded theory study. J Urmia Nur Mid 10: 51-63.
- Pullen L, Tuck I, Mix K (1996) Mental health nurse’s spiritual perspectives. J Holist Nurs 14: 85-97.
- Mauk Kl, Shmidt NK (2004) Spiritual care in nursing practice. Lippincott company 51-52
Citation: Asadzandi M (2017) Clients and Patients’ Spiritual Nursing Diagnosis of the Sound Heart Model. J Community Med Health Educ 7: 581. DOI: 10.4172/2161-0711.1000581
Copyright: ©2017 Asadzandi M. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Share This Article
Recommended Journals
Open Access Journals
Article Tools
Article Usage
- Total views: 8904
- [From(publication date): 0-2017 - Nov 23, 2024]
- Breakdown by view type
- HTML page views: 8120
- PDF downloads: 784