Barriers to the Provision of Spiritual Care by Nurses for Hospitalized Patients in Jordan
Background and Purpose: Spiritual care is an essential part of holistic patient care
but is provided infrequently in practice. There is a paucity of research investigating
the barriers to the provision of spiritual care among Jordanian nurses. The main
purpose of this cross-sectional, correlational study was to identify these barriers
and to explore the associations with nurses? personal and professional characteristics.
A secondary purpose was to examine the psychometric properties of a newly
developed spiritual care barriers instrument. Methods: We surveyed a convenience
sample of Jordanian nurses (N = 282). Participants completed both the Spiritual Well-
Being Scale (SWBS) and the Spiritual Care Barriers Scale (SCBS). We conducted an
exploratory factor analysis to examine the internal structure of the SCBS, and internal
consistency was assessed by Cronbach?s alpha. Results: The most common
perceived barriers were lack of private places (82.3%), absence of an imam (79.8%),
insufficient time (78.8%), inadequate skills and competencies (73.7%), lack of
religious and spiritual facilities and resources in the hospital (71.3%), and insufficient
knowledge (71.3%). Nurses? personal spiritual and existential well-being were negatively
associated with spiritual care barriers. Head nurses and supervisors reported
lower mean scores on perceived barriers than did associate nurses. The SCBS exhibited
acceptable evidence of internal consistency and validity. Implications for
Practice: The findings help Jordanian nurse decision makers in practice and education
to overcome barriers to the provision of spiritual care to better meet the spiritual
needs of Muslim patients.