Advancing health in the 21st century through spiritually-guided health risk interceptions (SGHRI)
View File(s)
- Author(s)
- Details
-
Jacquie Marshall, MSN, MPH, CNE
- Sigma Affiliation
- Lambda Chi
- Contributor Affiliation(s)
- Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida, USA
Visitor Statistics
Visits vs Downloads
Visitors - World Map
Top Visiting Countries
Country | Visits |
---|
Top Visiting Cities
City | Visits |
---|
Visits (last 6 months)
Downloads (last 6 months)
Popular Works for Marshall, Jacquie by View
Title | Page Views |
---|
Popular Works for Marshall, Jacquie by Download
Title | Downloads |
---|
View Citations
Citations
Session presented on Thursday, September 25, 2014:
The relationship between spirituality and health is evident in the literature. Additionally, approaches to health promotion guided by spirituality have proven beneficial in various health outcomes. Research has also demonstrated the dire health outcomes for many unhealthy Americans for whom conventional methods of health promotion have been less than favorable. As an intentional shift occurs toward equitable health care, it is important to examine unconventional approaches to health promotion. The concept of Spiritually-guided health risk interceptions (SGHRI) represents such an approach. Spiritually-guided health risk interceptions (SGHRI) provide the impetus-in-action toachieve healthy balance through the integration of spiritual, physical and emotional dimensions of self. As such SGHRI are designed and implemented through spiritually-informed methods with the intention of intercepting risky health behaviors. Impetus-in-action is the representation of spirituality as the stimulus in motion facilitating the forward movement toward healthy behaviors and outcomes. In considering this, how can health care personnel utilize spirituality to influence health in varied populations? What is the affiliation between ones spirituality and health care practices? Are there salient features, centered on core spiritual practices which determine decisions, explain actions, and depict health outcomes? Central ideologies of spirituality provide a viable platform upon which health promotional activities can be sponsored, learned and maintained. By combining the two, the health educator may be able to effectively tap into motivating factors that can contribute to improved health care practices and outcomes that last a lifetime. Using spirituality as a foundation for the proposed study the investigator will examine the influence of a spiritually-guided health risk intervention on breast self-care attitudes in Afro-Caribbean women. It is hoped that the findings of the study will generate knowledge pertaining to ways in which SGHRI may be used to (a) create environments that value spiritual health; and (b) actualize interventions that utilize the concept of spirituality to ameliorate the potentiation of risky health behaviors.
Leadership Summit 2014 Theme: Personal. Professional. Global. Held at the Indianapolis Marriott Downtown, Indianapolis.
Items submitted to a conference/event were evaluated/peer-reviewed at the time of abstract submission to the event. No other peer-review was provided prior to submission to the Henderson Repository.
Type | Poster |
Acquisition | Proxy-submission |
Review Type | Abstract Review Only: Reviewed by Event Host |
Format | Text-based Document |
Evidence Level | N/A |
Research Approach | N/A |
Keywords | SGHRI; Spiritually-guided Health Risk Interventions; Spirituality |
Name | Leadership Summit 2014 |
Host | Sigma Theta Tau International |
Location | Indianapolis, Indiana, USA |
Date | 2014 |
All rights reserved by the author(s) and/or publisher(s) listed in this item record unless relinquished in whole or part by a rights notation or a Creative Commons License present in this item record.
All permission requests should be directed accordingly and not to the Sigma Repository.
All submitting authors or publishers have affirmed that when using material in their work where they do not own copyright, they have obtained permission of the copyright holder prior to submission and the rights holder has been acknowledged as necessary.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subjects.
-
Community genogram: An innovation to guide health promotion and risk reduction interventions in rural Thailand
Singha-Dong, Naruemol; Bigelow, April; Pardee, Michelle; Thanjaroen, Sornchai; Danrabiab, Sataporn; Chapthaisong, Orathai; Khammoon, Supamas; Tochaiyaphum, Somrutai; Sanudchai, Wijitra; Kruadsungnoen, Pornsiri; Ramhan, Rattanapon (2018-06-19)This study aims to evaluate the usefulness of the genogram for its capacity to serve as an aid to better understand family structure and dynamics at a community level and guide health promotion and risk reduction interventions ... -
Improving Spiritual Health Through Intentional Screening and Targeted Interventions in Primary Care
Benfield, ErikaAfter a targeted translational intervention was applied in primary care, analysis of the improvement outcomes indicated that there is a need for routine screening for spiritual health status in primary care, but further ... -
Web-scraping and nursing research in the 21st century: What would Florence do?
Jackson, Kristopher J.; Judge, Shana M.Human interaction with the Internet generates data being used by researchers across a variety of disciplines. This review of the literature aims to define web-scraping as a data collection method, identify disciplines that ... -
An exploration of the first year of nursing practice: Continued formation as registered nurses in the 21st century
Sheldon, Carol A.A challenge to health care in the 21st Century is preparing and integrating newly registered nurses (RNs) into the health care system. The most ill and infirm are often the recipients of nursing care provided by new RNs, ... -
Using 21st century technology and innovation to increase simulation capacity
LeFlore, Judy L.; Anderson, Mindi; Blankenship, Jeanette; Cipher, Daisha J.; Mancini, Mary E. (Beth); Rogers, Meagan; Roye, Jennifer (2016-08-11)Purpose: To accommodate the increased capacity of students while expanding their exposure to quality clinical encounters in a simulated environment. Methods: This randomized-controlled study replaces 50% of clinical ...