Resilience in Palliative Care 2007
DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199206414.003.0008
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Resilience and spirituality

Abstract: This chapter examines the relation between spirituality and resilience in a palliative care setting. It provides a pragmatic clarification of the concepts of resilience and spirituality and proposes a resilience model focusing on spirituality. It suggests that spiritual support in palliative care setting requires special attention from the staff in order to see the person in care and his or her situation and history as a whole, beyond the immediate physical needs.

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Cited by 16 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Within this context, resilience is referred to the ability of patients to cope with incurable illness and the derived problems, that is to say, to cope with the new point of view that gives a limited life expectancy (Radbruch et al, 2009). In this study, resilience has been the variable with the higher predictive value for spirituality, which is in line with Vanistendael’s (2007) approach to resilience: resiliency and spirituality are closely related, sharing both an element of meaning at their basis. Thus, this relation is a central component when addressing the resources and needs of patients in palliative care.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 79%
“…Within this context, resilience is referred to the ability of patients to cope with incurable illness and the derived problems, that is to say, to cope with the new point of view that gives a limited life expectancy (Radbruch et al, 2009). In this study, resilience has been the variable with the higher predictive value for spirituality, which is in line with Vanistendael’s (2007) approach to resilience: resiliency and spirituality are closely related, sharing both an element of meaning at their basis. Thus, this relation is a central component when addressing the resources and needs of patients in palliative care.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 79%
“…Resilience is defined as "the ability of an individual person or a social system to grow and develop in difficult circumstances" [14]. It refers to a person's aptitude to adaptively deal with challenging and problematic situations, acting like a counterpart of the concept of "psychological risk factors" [15].…”
Section: A Emotional Intelligence and Resiliencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Spiritual faith, religious traditions, and socio-normative rituals, whether practiced alone-individually or with others-collectively, have great resiliency benefits on the mind, psyche, mood, behavior, soul, body, attitude, and relational connectivity. They help keep a broader mental perspective, an adequate motivational energy, a transcendent view of reality (beyond the material realm), a closer bond with others and with nature, a calmer nervous system, a more peaceful posture of heart, and a confident ongoing attitude, all enhancing strength, endurance, fortitude, regulation, survival, and wellbeing (Abi-Hashem, 2001, 2011aKira et al, 2020;Koenig, 2008;Paine et al, 2015;Vanistendael, 2007).…”
Section: Resiliency and Spiritualitymentioning
confidence: 99%