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Spirituality
Protects Against
End-Of-Life Despair
Excerpt
By Alison
McCook,
Reuters Health
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Having
a sense of spiritual well-being -- or an understanding of the
meaning and purpose of life, regardless of religion -- appears
to help terminally ill people avoid spending their last months
of life in despair, according to a report released Thursday.
Among people with less than three
months to live, U.S. investigators found that those with a strong
sense of spiritual well-being were less likely than others to
feel hopeless, want to die or consider suicide.
Patients who were depressed only
tended to want to die if they also had a low sense of spiritual
well-being. In contrast, those with a strong sense of spirituality
did not wish for a hastened death, regardless of whether they
were also depressed.
Many terminally ill patients feel
despair during their final days of life, which can manifest itself
in a number of ways, such as the hopelessness, wish for death,
or suicidal thoughts.
The current findings suggest that
providing patients with a strong sense of spiritual well-being
may enable them to avoid spending their last days in despair,
according to the authors.
'Spiritual well-being is a really
crucial, central aspect of how you cope with death,' study author
Dr. Barry Rosenfeld of Fordham University in New York told Reuters
Health.
While 'meaning-centered' therapy
might also help patients who are not terminally ill, this type
of assistance could be critical during the last months of life,
Rosenfeld noted.
'It may be more important as you
get older and closer to death, and have a more reflective perspective
on life,' he said.
The findings appear in the May
10th issue of the journal The Lancet.
Numerous studies have suggested
that spirituality can ease the blow from a host of difficulties,
including a diagnosis of breast cancer, the death of a loved one,
and even arthritis.
To study whether spirituality helps
protect against the depression, despair, and hopelessness that
can appear in patients told they have only a short while to live,
Rosenfeld and his colleagues interviewed 160 patients with a life
expectancy of less than three months.
The researchers questioned patients
about a number of aspects of their well-being, including depression,
hopelessness, suicidal thoughts, whether they believed they were
receiving social support, their symptoms and the state of their
physical functioning.
Spirituality was measured in two
ways: meaning, defined as the extent to which patients felt inner
peace, and faith, which addressed the comfort and strength they
got from their religious beliefs.
Patients who expressed a strong
sense of either type of spirituality were less likely than those
with low spiritual well-being to show symptoms of end-of-life
despair, the authors report.
In an interview, Rosenfeld said
he would like to see health workers incorporate more psychological
and spiritual elements into palliative care, which originally
concentrated only on physical comfort during the last days of
life.
He added that even patients with
only a few months to live can respond to efforts to help them
glean meaning and value from their lives, and it may never be
too late to try.
'I think you can gain something
up until the very end,' Rosenfeld said.
SOURCE: The Lancet 2003;361:1603-1607.
Additonal
Resources on Spirituality (relation to Palliative Care)
Reference
Source 89
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