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°£È£´ëÇлýÀÇ ¿µ¼º, ÁÁÀº Á×À½ ÀνÄ, È£½ºÇǽº ÀνÄÀÌ ÀÓÁ¾°£È£ ŵµ¿¡ ¹ÌÄ¡´Â ¿µÇâ Effects of Spirituality, Good Death Perception, and Hospice Perception on Terminal Care Attitude of Nursing Students

Nursing and Health Issues 2024³â 29±Ç 1È£ p.10 ~ 20
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ÀåÀμø ( Jang In-Sun ) 

±¸¼º¿¬ ( Koo Sung-Yeon ) 

¹æÁö¿ø ( Bang Ji-Won ) 

¾öÁÖÇö ( Eom Ju-Hyeon ) 

À°»óÈñ ( Youk Sang-Hee ) 

ÀÌÇÏ°æ ( Lee Ha-Kyoung ) 

Á¤¿¹ÁØ ( Jeoug Ye-Jun ) 

Áö¼­¿ø ( Ji Seo-Won ) 

Abstract


Purpose: This study aimed to identify factors that can influence their terminal care attitude and provide basic data for intervention development to foster positive terminal care attitudes among these students.

Methods: This study employed a descriptive research method and was conducted from September 8 to 26, 2023, with 168 students from three nursing colleges in Korea. The collected data were analyzed by frequency and percentage, independent t-test, ANOVA, pearson¡¯s correlation coefficient, and multiple regression using IBM SPSS 29.0.

Results: A total of 168 students in the study (female 80.4%; Junior 51.2% and Senior 48.8%). The nursing students¡¯ terminal care attitude showed a significant positive correlation with spirituality (r=.24, p=.002), good death perception (r=.19, p=.012) and hospice perception (r=.52, p£¼.001). The results of the multiple regression analysis showed that the regression model was significant (F=12.77, p£¼.001) and that hospice perception (?=.51, p£¼.001) explained 26.1% of the nursing students¡¯ terminal care attitude.

Conclusion: It is necessary to include hospice perception when constructing the spiritual nursing curriculums in order to improve nursing students¡¯ terminal care attitude.

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Spirituality; Death; Hospices; Terminal care; Attitude

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