Silent Needs, Shared Stories: A Narrative Inquiry Into Spiritual Care in Paediatric Critical Care Settings.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 NURSING
Shamsi Atefeh, Mazhari Zahra, Moayed Malihe Sadat, Hashemi Narges
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Abstract

Background: Spiritual health, as a fundamental component of holistic well-being, remains inadequately addressed in paediatric intensive care units (PICUs), despite its recognised impact on coping and quality of life for both children and their families. The World Health Organization's health framework omits the spiritual dimension, even as global evidence highlights the importance of spiritual care, especially in high-stress settings like PICUs where mothers and nurses face profound emotional and existential challenges.

Aim: This study aimed to explore and compare the lived experiences of mothers and nurses regarding spiritual care in PICUs, with a focus on understanding how storytelling can bridge the gap between caregiving and care-receiving perspectives.

Study design: A qualitative study utilising narrative inquiry and conventional content analysis, underpinned by Watson's Theory of Human Caring and phenomenological approaches. Semi-structured, narrative interviews were conducted with 14 mothers and 11 nurses from the PICU of Imam Hossein Hospital, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Iran. Participants were selected via purposive and convenience sampling. Interviews incorporated storytelling techniques to elicit deep, experiential narratives. Data were analysed using Graneheim and Lundman's content analysis framework, with iterative coding and thematic analysis until saturation was achieved.

Results: Two main themes emerged: (1) The Nurse as a Source of Spiritual Resilience and (2) The Need for Empathetic Support in Crisis. Nurses were perceived as facilitators of peace through empathic care and effective communication, while clinical competence blended with subtle sensitivity was crucial for building trust. Storytelling enabled mutual understanding and emotional anchoring, highlighting the therapeutic value of narrative in addressing spiritual needs.

Conclusions: Spiritual care is a vital yet often marginalised aspect of paediatric critical care. Nurses play a central role in providing spiritual resilience, but require better training and support. Storytelling serves as a powerful tool for fostering empathy, understanding and therapeutic engagement between mothers and nurses in the PICU.

Relevance to clinical practice: Integrating spiritual care and narrative approaches into PICU practice can enhance emotional support for families, improve coping and strengthen the nurse-family therapeutic alliance. These findings advocate for targeted education and policy changes to empower nurses in delivering holistic, spiritually sensitive care.

沉默的需要,分享的故事:对儿科重症监护环境中精神护理的叙述调查。
背景:精神健康作为整体福祉的基本组成部分,在儿科重症监护病房(picu)中仍然没有得到充分解决,尽管它对儿童及其家庭的应对和生活质量产生了公认的影响。世界卫生组织的卫生框架忽略了精神层面,尽管全球证据强调了精神护理的重要性,特别是在picu这样的高压力环境中,母亲和护士面临着深刻的情感和生存挑战。目的:本研究旨在探讨和比较picu中母亲和护士在精神护理方面的生活经历,重点了解讲故事如何弥合照顾和接受照顾观点之间的差距。研究设计:一项定性研究,利用叙事调查和传统的内容分析,以沃森的人类关怀理论和现象学方法为基础。对来自伊朗伊斯法罕医科大学伊玛目侯赛因医院PICU的14名母亲和11名护士进行了半结构化的叙述性访谈。参与者的选择采用目的性和便利性抽样。采访结合了讲故事的技巧来引出深刻的、体验式的叙述。使用Graneheim和Lundman的内容分析框架分析数据,并进行迭代编码和主题分析,直到达到饱和。结果:出现了两个主要主题:(1)护士作为精神恢复力的来源;(2)危机中移情支持的需要。通过移情护理和有效沟通,护士被视为和平的推动者,而临床能力与微妙的敏感性混合对于建立信任至关重要。讲故事使相互理解和情感锚定,突出了叙事在解决精神需求方面的治疗价值。结论:精神护理是儿科重症护理的一个重要但往往被边缘化的方面。护士在提供精神恢复力方面发挥着核心作用,但需要更好的培训和支持。讲故事是在PICU中培养母亲和护士之间的同理心、理解和治疗参与的有力工具。与临床实践的相关性:将精神关怀和叙事方法融入PICU实践中,可以增强对家庭的情感支持,改善应对,加强护家治疗联盟。这些发现提倡有针对性的教育和政策变革,以增强护士提供全面、精神敏感护理的能力。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
13.30%
发文量
109
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Nursing in Critical Care is an international peer-reviewed journal covering any aspect of critical care nursing practice, research, education or management. Critical care nursing is defined as the whole spectrum of skills, knowledge and attitudes utilised by practitioners in any setting where adults or children, and their families, are experiencing acute and critical illness. Such settings encompass general and specialist hospitals, and the community. Nursing in Critical Care covers the diverse specialities of critical care nursing including surgery, medicine, cardiac, renal, neurosciences, haematology, obstetrics, accident and emergency, neonatal nursing and paediatrics. Papers published in the journal normally fall into one of the following categories: -research reports -literature reviews -developments in practice, education or management -reflections on practice
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