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The Role Of Spirituality And Religiosity In Persons Living With Sickle Cell Disease, Dora L. Clayton-Jones, Kristin Haglund
The Role Of Spirituality And Religiosity In Persons Living With Sickle Cell Disease, Dora L. Clayton-Jones, Kristin Haglund
College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications
Purpose: Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a serious debilitating chronic illness, affecting approximately 90,000 Americans and millions globally. Spirituality and religiosity (S/R) may ease the burden faced by persons living with SCD. The purpose of this study was to examine the role of S/R in adolescents and adults living with SCD in the research literature.
Method: The electronic databases Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Health Source Nursing/Academic, ProQuest Health Module, PsycINFO, Medline, PubMed, and the American Theological Library Association were searched from January 1995 to December 2014.
Findings: Of the 89 studies retrieved, 11 articles between 2001 …
Spirituality And Religiosity In Adolescents Living With Sickle Cell Disease, Dora L. Clayton-Jones, Kristin Haglund, Ruth Belknap, Jame Schaefer, Alexis A. Thompson
Spirituality And Religiosity In Adolescents Living With Sickle Cell Disease, Dora L. Clayton-Jones, Kristin Haglund, Ruth Belknap, Jame Schaefer, Alexis A. Thompson
College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications
This study purports to address paucity in the literature regarding how adolescents with sickle cell disease (SCD) describe and experience spirituality and religiosity (S/R). This was a qualitative descriptive study. Two semi-structured interviews were conducted with nine adolescents (Mage = 16.2 years). Data were analyzed using a template analysis style and a concurrent analysis process of data reduction. Three major themes encompassed the participants’ descriptions of the relationships between S/R, health and illness in their lives including S/R as sources for coping, influence of S/R beliefs on health and illness, and sharing S/R with Health Care Providers (HCPs). …