Purpose Service users very often interpret and respond to their experiences of death, dying and bereavement through a religious or spiritual lens. However, recent trends in religion and belief have influenced how professionals respond to indicators such as faith. Since the post-war years in Britain, and due to the transfer of services from church to state, as well as the change in the religious landscape, language has largely secularized. When people start addressing religion and belief again, they lack the appropriate literacy to do so, this is termed religious literacy by Dinham (2015). The purpose of this paper is to explore how professionals in end of life (EOL) care respond to service users’ religious and spiritual indicators, through...
Background Multiple factors influence the end-of-life (EoL) care and experience of poor quality serv...
Increasingly more older people are now being cared for in their own homes. Furthermore, it has becom...
A full understanding and a competent approach to dying patients will lead to qualitative service del...
This thesis explores the challenges and controversies that healthcare professionals who work in deat...
This is the first book to explore how religion, belief and spirituality are negotiated in hospice ca...
Research has abundantly demonstrated a strong relationship between culture, religion, and the experi...
A full understanding of and a competent approach to dying patients may lead to a more qu- alitative ...
Abundant literature has argued the significance of religion, belief, and spirituality at the end of ...
This paper aims to surface findings from an ethnographic study that explored religious literacy of h...
Background: Research has abundantly demonstrated a strong relationship between culture, religion an...
Religion and belief are once again largely recognised in the public sphere; religion has been reinst...
A full understanding of and a competent approach to dying patients may lead to a more qu-alitative s...
In the UK approximately 60% of deaths occur in acute hospital settings to people from different cult...
Religious care and psychological therapy provided at the end-of-life share universal characteristics...
The spiritual welfare of dying people has in recent years moved from the domain of religion to becom...
Background Multiple factors influence the end-of-life (EoL) care and experience of poor quality serv...
Increasingly more older people are now being cared for in their own homes. Furthermore, it has becom...
A full understanding and a competent approach to dying patients will lead to qualitative service del...
This thesis explores the challenges and controversies that healthcare professionals who work in deat...
This is the first book to explore how religion, belief and spirituality are negotiated in hospice ca...
Research has abundantly demonstrated a strong relationship between culture, religion, and the experi...
A full understanding of and a competent approach to dying patients may lead to a more qu- alitative ...
Abundant literature has argued the significance of religion, belief, and spirituality at the end of ...
This paper aims to surface findings from an ethnographic study that explored religious literacy of h...
Background: Research has abundantly demonstrated a strong relationship between culture, religion an...
Religion and belief are once again largely recognised in the public sphere; religion has been reinst...
A full understanding of and a competent approach to dying patients may lead to a more qu-alitative s...
In the UK approximately 60% of deaths occur in acute hospital settings to people from different cult...
Religious care and psychological therapy provided at the end-of-life share universal characteristics...
The spiritual welfare of dying people has in recent years moved from the domain of religion to becom...
Background Multiple factors influence the end-of-life (EoL) care and experience of poor quality serv...
Increasingly more older people are now being cared for in their own homes. Furthermore, it has becom...
A full understanding and a competent approach to dying patients will lead to qualitative service del...