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Personal Religiosity and Spirituality Associated with Social Work Practitioners' Use of Religious-Based Intervention Practices
39
Citations
17
References
2006
Year
Spiritual DevelopmentReligiositySocial Work PracticeMental HealthAbstract Social WorkersSocial WorkPsychologyReligious-based Intervention PracticesReligion StudiesReligious Identity StudiesReligious SystemsLanguage StudiesReligious GroupSocial Work PractitionersPersonal ReligiosityMindfulnessNursingProcess ModelSpiritual PracticesSpiritualityMedicine
Abstract Social workers (N = 221) in the Southeastern USA responded to survey questions measuring 3 outcome variables, attitude toward religion in social work, the appropriateness of 15 religious-based interventions, utilization of these practices, and 3 dimensions of spirituality: spiritual experiences (spirituality), religious practices (organized religiosity), and religious affiliation. Attitude was generally favorable, and more than half of the interventions were judged appropriate and utilized by over 50% of the respondents. Beyond identifying with no religion, which predicted lower outcome scores, high spirituality strongly predicted attitude and utilization, whereas extrinsic organized religiosity was unimportant. A process model utilizing path analysis suggested that personal spirituality increases utilization resulting in corresponding perceptions of appropriateness and attitude toward religion in practice. More research was recommended on (1) utilization prevalence in other and diverse samples, and (2) the efficacy of religious-based practice.
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