Other Titles

Spiritual Needs of Humans

Abstract

Session presented on Sunday, July 24, 2016:

Purpose: To develop an instrument that measures one's unified nature (spirituality) as separate from a set of dogmatic beliefs (religion).

Methods: Empirical referents are external measures of a concept grounded in the real world and are used for instrument development in research. Clinically they assist in clearly discerning the presence of a concept (Walker & Avant, 1995). A measurement of spirituality should include statements that reflect an individual's belief system, a connectedness with others, a higher power, and the universe, as well as a feeling of self-worth, hope and purpose. A 30-item Likert scale (strongly agreed to strongly disagree) was created using the following concepts as guides: A sense of connectedness or oneness Transcendence A non-local presence (otherworldly) Inner peace Actualization Forgiveness Trust Unconditional giving Acceptance of the unchangeable. A pilot test resulted in a reduction to 15 items, which were edited for clarity and circulated to a convenience sample of 188 individuals. Participants had a range of educational and socioeconomic backgrounds, and included both males and females.

Results: Using factor analysis to extract the underlying communality of one factor among the items in the instrument, a scree plot of eigenvalues was obtained. Absolute values less than 0.30 were suppressed, which resulted in three items being removed to strengthen the measure of one factor. The Cronbach's Alpha reliability coefficient for 12 items was 0.88, a good indication of construct reliability.

Conclusion: Spirituality, the construct of interest for this scale, is an essential philosophy of life centered on the awareness of a pervasive universal creative force that provides a sense of interconnectedness and an awareness of purpose and meaning in life as an ongoing process to transcend the physical existence in daily life (Bennington, 2003). The existing scales in the literature that measure spirituality all include religion as part of the construct. This instrument appears to consistently measure the factors that theoretically reflect the concept of spirituality without the concept of religion or religiosity. Additional testing on larger populations, including non-English speaking persons, would provide additional support for both the reliability of the instrument and the validity of the theoretical understanding of spirituality.

Author Details

Linda K. Bennington, RN

Sigma Membership

Unknown

Type

Presentation

Format Type

Text-based Document

Study Design/Type

N/A

Research Approach

N/A

Keywords:

Spirituality, Religion and dogma, Measuring spirituality

Conference Name

27th International Nursing Research Congress

Conference Host

Sigma Theta Tau International

Conference Location

Cape Town, South Africa

Conference Year

2016

Rights Holder

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Review Type

Abstract Review Only: Reviewed by Event Host

Acquisition

Proxy-submission

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A measurement of spirituality

Cape Town, South Africa

Session presented on Sunday, July 24, 2016:

Purpose: To develop an instrument that measures one's unified nature (spirituality) as separate from a set of dogmatic beliefs (religion).

Methods: Empirical referents are external measures of a concept grounded in the real world and are used for instrument development in research. Clinically they assist in clearly discerning the presence of a concept (Walker & Avant, 1995). A measurement of spirituality should include statements that reflect an individual's belief system, a connectedness with others, a higher power, and the universe, as well as a feeling of self-worth, hope and purpose. A 30-item Likert scale (strongly agreed to strongly disagree) was created using the following concepts as guides: A sense of connectedness or oneness Transcendence A non-local presence (otherworldly) Inner peace Actualization Forgiveness Trust Unconditional giving Acceptance of the unchangeable. A pilot test resulted in a reduction to 15 items, which were edited for clarity and circulated to a convenience sample of 188 individuals. Participants had a range of educational and socioeconomic backgrounds, and included both males and females.

Results: Using factor analysis to extract the underlying communality of one factor among the items in the instrument, a scree plot of eigenvalues was obtained. Absolute values less than 0.30 were suppressed, which resulted in three items being removed to strengthen the measure of one factor. The Cronbach's Alpha reliability coefficient for 12 items was 0.88, a good indication of construct reliability.

Conclusion: Spirituality, the construct of interest for this scale, is an essential philosophy of life centered on the awareness of a pervasive universal creative force that provides a sense of interconnectedness and an awareness of purpose and meaning in life as an ongoing process to transcend the physical existence in daily life (Bennington, 2003). The existing scales in the literature that measure spirituality all include religion as part of the construct. This instrument appears to consistently measure the factors that theoretically reflect the concept of spirituality without the concept of religion or religiosity. Additional testing on larger populations, including non-English speaking persons, would provide additional support for both the reliability of the instrument and the validity of the theoretical understanding of spirituality.