Description
helping older people to *sustain the self* to allow them freedom to do personal spiritual work
helping patients cope with changing circumstances
providing a sense of direction
the opposition of spiritual values by contemporary social policy
caring for each person as an *ensouled body* and *embodied soul*
assessing spiritual needs
a positive approach to dementia
spiritual reminiscence as exploration of life meanings
study comparison of traditional religiousness versus de-institutionalized spiritual seeking
the pain associated with dyingand spirituality*s place in it
addressing the multiple aspects of suffering
clowning as care of the spirit
Buddhist and Christian approaches to understanding aging, death, and spirituality
caregivers adapting to the world of the patient
the spiritual aspect of palliative care in residential aged care
personal competence and operational competence in student learning
intimate, professional, and communal fidelity







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