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El. knyga: Oxford Textbook of Spirituality in Healthcare [Oxford Medicine Online E-books]

Edited by (Professor of Medicine and Health Sciences, The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences Director, The George Was), Edited by , Edited by (Clinical Director and Senior Chaplain, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK)
  • Formatas: 512 pages, 22 line drawings and halftones
  • Serija: Oxford Textbooks In Public Health
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-Aug-2012
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199571390
  • Oxford Medicine Online E-books
  • Kaina nežinoma
  • Formatas: 512 pages, 22 line drawings and halftones
  • Serija: Oxford Textbooks In Public Health
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-Aug-2012
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199571390
The relationship between spirituality and healthcare is historical, intellectual and practical, and it has now emerged as a significant field in health research, healthcare policy and clinical practice and training. Understanding health and wellbeing requires addressing spiritual and existential issues, and healthcare is therefore challenged to respond to the ways spirituality is experienced and expressed in illness, suffering, healing and loss. If healthcare has compassionate regard for the humanity of those it serves it is faced with questions about how it understands and interprets spirituality, what resources it should make available and how these are organised, and the ways in which spirituality shapes and informs the purpose and practice of healthcare? These questions are the basis for this book that presents a coherent field of enquiry, discussion and debate that is interdisciplinary, international and vibrant.

There is a growing corpus of articles in medical and healthcare journals on spirituality in addition to a wide range of literature, but there has been no attempt so far to publish a standard text on this subject. Spirituality in Healthcare is an authoritative reference on the subject providing unequalled coverage, critical depth and an integrated source of key topics. Divided into six sections including practice, research, policy and training, the book brings together international contributions from scholars in the field to provide a unique and stimulating resource.

Daugiau informacijos

Includes 12 months access to the online version
Foreword v
Preface vii
List of contributors
xiii
Section I Traditions
1 Medicine and religion: a historical perspective
3(8)
Gary B. Ferngren
2 Buddhism: perspectives for the contemporary world
11(8)
Kathleen Gregory
3 Chinese religion: Taoism
19(6)
Russell Kirkland
4 Christianity
25(6)
Alister E. McGrath
5 Feminist spirituality
31(6)
Susan A. Ross
6 Indian religion and the Ayurvedic tradition
37(6)
Prakash N. Desai
7 The western humanist tradition
43(6)
Stan van Hooft
8 Indigenous spiritualties
49(6)
Graham Harvey
9 Islam
55(8)
Abdulaziz Sachedina
10 Judaism
63(6)
Dan Cohn-Sherbok
11 `New Age' spirituality
69(8)
Paul Heelas
12 Philosophy
77(6)
Graham Oppy
13 Secularism
83(6)
Trevor Stammers
Stephen Bullivant
14 Sikhism
89(10)
Eleanor Nesbitt
Section II Concepts
15 Healthcare spirituality: a question of knowledge
99(6)
John Swinton
16 Personhood
105(8)
Rosalie Hudson
17 Belief
113(6)
Mark Cobb
18 Hope
119(8)
Jaklin Eliott
19 Meaning making
127(8)
Laurie A. Burke
Robert A. Neimeyer
20 Compassion: luxury or necessity?
135(10)
Carol Taylor
Susan Walker
21 Dignity: a novel path into the spiritual landscape of the human heart
145(6)
Shane Sinclair
Harvey M. Chochinov
22 Cure and healing
151(6)
Lodovico Balducci
H. Lee Modditt
23 Suffering
157(6)
Betty Ferrell
Catherine Del Ferraro
24 Ritual
163(6)
Douglas J. Davies
25 Culture and religion
169(8)
Peter van der Veer
Section III Practice
26 Models of spiritual care
177(8)
Bruce Rumbold
27 Healthcare chaplaincy
185(6)
Chris Swift
George Handzo
Jeffrey Cohen
28 Complementary, alternative, and integrative medicine
191(6)
Margaret L. Stuber
Brandon Horn
29 Restorative medicine
197(14)
Christina M. Puchalski
30 Nursing
211(8)
Wilfred McSherry
Linda Ross
31 Faith community (parish) nursing
219(8)
Antonia M. van Loon
32 Psychiatry and mental health treatment
227(8)
James L. Griffith
33 Social work
235(8)
Margaret Holloway
34 Care of children
243(8)
Patricia Fosarelli
35 Care of elderly people
251(6)
Elizabeth MacKinlay
36 Palliative care
257(8)
Jackie Ellis
Mari Lloyd-Williams
37 Spirituality and the arts: discovering what really matters
265(8)
Nigel Hartley
38 Care of the soul
273(6)
Michael Kearney
Radhule Weininger
39 Counselling
279(6)
William West
40 Dignity conserving care: research evidence
285(8)
Shane Sinclair
Harvey M. Chochinov
41 Pastoral theology in healthcare settings: blessed irritant for holistic human care
293(6)
Emmanuel Y. Lartey
42 Next steps for spiritual assessment in healthcare
299(10)
George Fitchett
Section IV Research
43 Methodology
309(14)
David Hufford
44 Measures
323(10)
Arndt Bussing
45 On the links between religion and health: what has empirical research taught us?
333(8)
Hisham Abu-Raiya
Kenneth I. Pargament
46 Quality of life
341(6)
Bella Vivat
47 Cognitive sciences: a perspective on spirituality and religious experience
347(6)
Kevin S. Seybold
48 Spiritual Well-Being Scale: mental and physical health relationships
353(6)
Raymond F. Paloutzian
Rodger K. Bufford
Ashley J. Wildman
49 Prayer and meditation
359(8)
Marek Jantos
50 Resiliency and coping
367(8)
Gregory Fricchione
Shamim Nejad
51 Spiritual experience, practice, and community
375(8)
Fiona Gardner
Section V Policy and Education
52 Policy
383(8)
Bruce Rumbold
Mark Cobb
Christina M. Puchalski
53 Healthcare organizations: corporate spirituality
391(6)
Neil Pembroke
54 Utility and commissioning of spiritual carers
397(12)
Lindsay B. Carey
55 Social care
409(8)
Holly Nelson-Becker
Mary Pat Sullivan
56 Curriculum development, courses, and CPE
417(1)
Part I Curriculum development in spirituality and health in the health professions
417(12)
Christina M. Puchalski
Mark Cobb
Bruce Rumbold
Part II Clinical Pastoral Education
429(44)
Angelika A. Zollfrank
Catherine F. Garlid
57 Competences in spiritual care education and training
435(8)
Ewan Kelly
58 Guidance from the humanities for professional formation
443(8)
Nathan Carlin
Thomas Cole
Henry Strobel
59 Training and formation: a case study
451(8)
Fiona Gardner
60 Interdisciplinary teamwork
459(6)
Peter Speck
61 Ethical principles for spiritual care
465(8)
Daniel P. Sulmasy
Section VI Challenges
62 Contemporary spirituality
473(8)
David Tacey
63 The future of religion
481(6)
Grace Davie
Martyn Percy
64 The future of spirituality and healthcare
487(6)
Mark Cobb
Bruce Rumbold
Christina M. Puchalski
Index 493
Mark Cobb is a Senior Chaplain and a Clinical Director at the Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and holds honorary academic posts at the University of Sheffield and the University of Liverpool. He has a multidisciplinary education across science and the humanities and has experience working in the community, voluntary and acute health sectors.

Christina M. Puchalski is founding Director of the George Washington Institute for Spirituality and Health (GWish) in Washington, D.C. and a Professor of Medicine and Health Sciences at The George Washington University. Dr. Puchalski is a pioneer and leader in the movement to integrate spirituality into healthcare in both the clinical setting and in medical education. Her work continues to break ground in the clinical, academic, and pastoral understanding of spiritual care as an essential element of healthcare. She is an active clinician, board certified in Internal Medicine and Palliative Care. Her accolades include the 2009 George Washington University Distinguished Alumni Award and 2011 Outstanding Colleague Award from the National Association of Catholic Chaplains. She is a Fellow of the American College of Physicians and is also a member of the contemplative Carmelite lay community. Dr. Puchalski has authored many publications and been featured in numerous print and television media.



Bruce Rumbold is Director of the Palliative Care Unit at La Trobe University, where his responsibilities include coordinating health promoting palliative care and spiritual care academic programs alongside developing public health approaches to end of life care. His multidisciplinary interests are supported by postgraduate qualifications in physics, practical theology and health social science. Prior to joining La Trobe he was from 1986-2002 foundation professor of pastoral studies at Whitley College, an affiliated teaching institution of the Melbourne College of Divinity. Social determinants of end of life experience, and spiritual care, are the particular foci of his current work