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      The Impact of US Nurses’ Personal Religious and Spiritual Beliefs on Their Mental Well-Being and Burnout: A Path Analysis

      research-article
      ,
      Journal of Religion and Health
      Springer US
      Religion, Spirituality, Mental well-being, Burnout, Nurses

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          Abstract

          This study addresses the gap in the literature regarding the impact of nurses’ personal religious and spiritual beliefs on their mental well-being and burnout. A model of the association between these factors was tested based on surveys of 207 nurses located in southeastern USA and analyzed to determine the association between religion/spirituality, mental well-being, and burnout. A path analysis supported a model in which, through its positive impact on mental well-being, religion/spirituality was negatively associated with emotional exhaustion and depersonalization and positively associated with personal accomplishment.

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          Most cited references71

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          The measurement of experienced burnout

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            Happiness is everything, or is it? Explorations on the meaning of psychological well-being.

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              You want to measure coping but your protocol's too long: consider the brief COPE.

              Studies of coping in applied settings often confront the need to minimize time demands on participants. The problem of participant response burden is exacerbated further by the fact that these studies typically are designed to test multiple hypotheses with the same sample, a strategy that entails the use of many time-consuming measures. Such research would benefit from a brief measure of coping assessing several responses known to be relevant to effective and ineffective coping. This article presents such a brief form of a previously published measure called the COPE inventory (Carver, Scheier, & Weintraub, 1989), which has proven to be useful in health-related research. The Brief COPE omits two scales of the full COPE, reduces others to two items per scale, and adds one scale. Psychometric properties of the Brief COPE are reported, derived from a sample of adults participating in a study of the process of recovery after Hurricane Andrew.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Stephanie.Harris@adventhealth.com
                Hong.Tao@adventhealth.com
                Journal
                J Relig Health
                J Relig Health
                Journal of Religion and Health
                Springer US (New York )
                0022-4197
                1573-6571
                25 February 2021
                : 1-20
                Affiliations
                Center for Whole-Person Research, AdventHealth, 301 E. Princeton Street, Orlando, FL 32804 USA
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-6827-5487
                Article
                1203
                10.1007/s10943-021-01203-y
                7905975
                33630228
                8d960c21-17f6-432c-a8af-899fbf8c7bb3
                © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC part of Springer Nature 2021

                This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.

                History
                : 30 January 2021
                Categories
                Original Paper

                Sociology
                religion,spirituality,mental well-being,burnout,nurses
                Sociology
                religion, spirituality, mental well-being, burnout, nurses

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