Predictors of spirituality at the end of life.

OBJECTIVE To assess the relationship between spirituality and hopelessness, desire for hastened death, and clinical and disease-related characteristics among patients with advanced cancer, and to investigate predictors of spirituality. Spiritual well-being is thought to have a beneficial effect on patients' response to illness. DESIGN Patients were asked to complete 4 questionnaires: the Greek version of the Spiritual Involvement and Beliefs Scale, the Greek version of the Schedule of Attitudes toward Hastened Death, the Beck Hopelessness Scale, and a questionnaire on demographics. SETTING A palliative care unit in Athens, Greece. PARTICIPANTS A total of 91 patients with advanced cancer. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Associations between scores on the Spiritual Involvement and Beliefs scale and scores on the Schedule of Attitudes toward Hastened Death scale and the Beck Hopelessness scale, and demographic characteristics. RESULTS Statistically significant associations were found between spirituality and sex of patients (P = .001) and spirituality and stronger hopelessness (r = 0.252, P = .016). In multivariate analyses, stronger hopelessness, male sex, younger age, and receiving chemotherapy were found to be the strongest predictors of being spiritual. CONCLUSION Demographic and clinical characteristics and stronger hopelessness appeared to have statistically significant relationships with spirituality. Interventions to improve patients' spiritual well-being should take these relationships into account.

[1]  C. Brown Faith and health , 2007 .

[2]  L. Vlahos,et al.  Assessing Spirituality and Religiousness in Advanced Cancer Patients , 2007, The American journal of hospice & palliative care.

[3]  T. Cerny,et al.  Spirituality, psychotherapy and music in palliative cancer care: research projects in psycho-oncology at an oncology center in Switzerland , 2005, Supportive Care in Cancer.

[4]  J. Laurenceau,et al.  Religiousness and the Trajectory of Self-Rated Health Across Adulthood , 2005, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[5]  L. Vlahos,et al.  The schedule of attitudes toward hastened death: Validation analysis in terminally ill cancer patients , 2004, Palliative and Supportive Care.

[6]  M. Little,et al.  While there's life ... hope and the experience of cancer. , 2004, Social science & medicine.

[7]  M. Farrell,et al.  The Association Between Spirituality and Depression in an Urban Clinic. , 2004, Primary care companion to the Journal of clinical psychiatry.

[8]  W. Breitbart,et al.  Hopelessness and terminal illness: The construct of hopelessness in patients with advanced AIDS , 2004, Palliative and Supportive Care.

[9]  S. Bauer-Wu,et al.  Psycho-spiritual well-being in patients with advanced cancer: an integrative review of the literature. , 2003, Journal of advanced nursing.

[10]  Bruce Rumbold Caring for the spirit: lessons from working with the dying , 2003, The Medical journal of Australia.

[11]  W. Breitbart,et al.  Effect of spiritual well-being on end-of-life despair in terminally-ill cancer patients , 2003, The Lancet.

[12]  Peter C. Hill,et al.  Advances in the conceptualization and measurement of religion and spirituality. Implications for physical and mental health research. , 2003, The American psychologist.

[13]  W. Breitbart,et al.  Assessing Psychological Distress Near the End of Life , 2002 .

[14]  A. Weaver,et al.  Religious and spiritual variables in three major oncology nursing journals: 1990-1999. , 2002, Oncology nursing forum.

[15]  A. Norberg,et al.  The meaning of the lived experience of hope in patients with cancer in palliative home care , 2001, Palliative medicine.

[16]  M. McCullough,et al.  Handbook of Religion and Health , 2001 .

[17]  W. Breitbart,et al.  Depression, hopelessness, and desire for hastened death in terminally ill patients with cancer. , 2000, JAMA.

[18]  I. Wiklund,et al.  Hope in newly diagnosed patients with cancer. , 2000, Cancer nursing.

[19]  B. Rosenfeld Assisted suicide, depression, and the right to die. , 2000, Psychology, public policy, and law : an official law review of the University of Arizona College of Law and the University of Miami School of Law.

[20]  William T. Hoyt,et al.  Religious involvement and mortality: a meta-analytic review. , 2000, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[21]  S. Maillet Spiritual care of the dying. , 1991, C.H.A.C. review.

[22]  T. Glass,et al.  Does Religious Commitment Contribute to Individual Life Satisfaction , 1989 .

[23]  A. Tipping Spiritual care for the dying. , 1981, Canadian pharmaceutical journal.

[24]  S. Folstein,et al.  "Mini-mental state". A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. , 1975, Journal of psychiatric research.

[25]  D Lester,et al.  The measurement of pessimism: the hopelessness scale. , 1974, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[26]  A. Schmale Relationship of Separation and Depression to Disease: I. A Report on a Hospitalized Medical Population , 1958, Psychosomatic medicine.