Spiritual approaches in healthcare settings proved effective in reducing the negative outcomes of dehumanization processes impacting health professionals and patients. Although previous literature focused on explicit measures of spirituality, the present research explored the role of implicit components of spirituality and their effects on the humanization of patients in two healthcare contexts. Professionals from hospices and nursing homes completed an implicit task to assess whether the diverse representation of death as physical or spiritual led to perceive patients with more uniquely human traits. Results showed that only for hospice participants, implicit and explicit spirituality predicts more humanness attribution to patients. This article discusses palliative care models and death education as a resource for reducing dehumanization.

The implicit soul: Factors between the representation of death and dehumanization of patients / A. Castro, I. Testoni, A. Zamperini, L. Ronconi, L. Galantin, A. Caraceni. - In: HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY OPEN. - ISSN 2055-1029. - 6:1(2019 Jun 16), pp. 2055102919854666.1-2055102919854666.9. [10.1177/2055102919854666]

The implicit soul: Factors between the representation of death and dehumanization of patients

A. Caraceni
Ultimo
2019

Abstract

Spiritual approaches in healthcare settings proved effective in reducing the negative outcomes of dehumanization processes impacting health professionals and patients. Although previous literature focused on explicit measures of spirituality, the present research explored the role of implicit components of spirituality and their effects on the humanization of patients in two healthcare contexts. Professionals from hospices and nursing homes completed an implicit task to assess whether the diverse representation of death as physical or spiritual led to perceive patients with more uniquely human traits. Results showed that only for hospice participants, implicit and explicit spirituality predicts more humanness attribution to patients. This article discusses palliative care models and death education as a resource for reducing dehumanization.
death; end-of-life; hospice; implicit measures; nursing; palliative care;
Settore MED/09 - Medicina Interna
Settore MED/06 - Oncologia Medica
16-giu-2019
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/907246
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