Conversations and Beyond:Religious/Spiritual Care Needs among Clinical Mental Health Patients in the Netherlands

This study examines religious/spiritual (R/S) care needs and their possible determinants among mental health patients in the Netherlands. Patients in a Christian (CC, n = 100) and a secular (SC, n = 101) mental health clinic completed a questionnaire. Analysis revealed three factors on the R/S care needs measure: (1) "R/S conversations,"(2) "R/S program and recovery,"and (3) "R/S similar outlook on life."The presence of R/S care needs was predicted by the following: site (CC versus SC), R/S involvement, and religious strain. Most commonly, unmet R/S care needs were explanation about R/S and il... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Van Nieuw Amerongen-Meeuse, Joke C.
Schaap-Jonker, Hanneke
Westerbroek, Gerlise
Anbeek, Christa
Braam, Arjan W.
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2020
Reihe/Periodikum: Van Nieuw Amerongen-Meeuse , J C , Schaap-Jonker , H , Westerbroek , G , Anbeek , C & Braam , A W 2020 , ' Conversations and Beyond : Religious/Spiritual Care Needs among Clinical Mental Health Patients in the Netherlands ' , Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease , vol. 208 , no. 7 , pp. 524-532 . https://doi.org/10.1097/NMD.0000000000001150
Schlagwörter: care needs / Religiosity / religiosity gap / religious strain / spirituality
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26844375
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/882a7b1c-423c-41dd-94d9-8fe4f4989a23

This study examines religious/spiritual (R/S) care needs and their possible determinants among mental health patients in the Netherlands. Patients in a Christian (CC, n = 100) and a secular (SC, n = 101) mental health clinic completed a questionnaire. Analysis revealed three factors on the R/S care needs measure: (1) "R/S conversations,"(2) "R/S program and recovery,"and (3) "R/S similar outlook on life."The presence of R/S care needs was predicted by the following: site (CC versus SC), R/S involvement, and religious strain. Most commonly, unmet R/S care needs were explanation about R/S and illness by the practitioner, prayer with a nurse, conversations about religious distress with a nurse, conversation when R/S conflicts with treatment, help in finding a congregation, and contact between chaplain and practitioner. "R/S similar outlook on life"was equally important to patients with and without R/S involvement. Patients appreciate a match in worldview with health professionals, either religious or secular.