Identity and resistance: why spiritual care needs 'enemies'.

@article{Swinton2006IdentityAR,
  title={Identity and resistance: why spiritual care needs 'enemies'.},
  author={John R. Swinton},
  journal={Journal of clinical nursing},
  year={2006},
  volume={15 7},
  pages={
          918-28
        }
}
  • J. Swinton
  • Published 1 July 2006
  • Philosophy
  • Journal of clinical nursing
AIMS This paper explores certain key critiques of spirituality-in-nursing as they have been offered by people outside of the discipline. It argues that nurses have not taken seriously enough the recent criticism of the nature and role of spirituality in nursing. Not to listen to the 'enemies' of spirituality-in-nursing is to risk stagnation and a drift into obscurity. BACKGROUND The area of spirituality has become a growing field of interest for nurses and has produced a burgeoning body of… 
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Correspondence: John Paley Senior Lecturer Department of Nursing and Midwifery University of Stirling Stirling FK9 4LA UK Telephone: þ44 1786 466399 E-mail: j.h.paley@stir.ac.uk or
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  • Philosophy
    Nursing philosophy : an international journal for healthcare professionals
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An understanding of spirituality is developed as a way of naming absences and recognizing gaps in healthcare provision as well as a prophetic challenge to some of the ways in which the authors practise health care within a secular and sometimes secularizing context such as the National Health Service.
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