Name: Manaois, Darlene Dana S.
Year & Section: BSN III BLOCK 4
Date: June 4 2021
Score:
I.Identification: Write your answers on the space provided before each number.
1. It is viewed as a deeper and more personal than organized religion. Nursing
2. The number of survey items in the Spiritual Assessment Scale. 21
3. The theorist who observed that “sickness may threaten the patient’s faith in the ultimate
‘goodness’ of life. Virginia Henderson
4. The theorist who accepted the transcendent nature of humanity. Parse
5. The “religiousness” element of the spirituality dimension. Religious Practice
6. It is a reflection of an individual’s transcendent values and philosophy of life. Personal Faith
7. The theorist who formulated the Adaptation Model, which focuses on the adaptive needs of
the ill person and family. Callista Roy
8. The theorist who formulated a conceptual framework that addresses the spiritual dimension
and needs of the ill person. Betty Neuman
9. It is “a personal relationship with God whose strength and sureness once can literally stake
one’s life”. Personal Faith
10. It is unfolding in simultaneous mutual interchange with the world transcending with greater
diversity and complexity. Nursing
11. The theorist who defined spiritual variable as the pivot on which the framework centers and
as having important implications for patients. Betty Neuman
12. The opposite of spiritual distress. Spiritual Contentment
13. The author of the Spiritual Assessment Scale. James Fowler
14. The only nursing theorist who explicitly describes the concept of the soul. Jean Watson
15. It has to do with one’s finding coherence in life, with seeing oneself in relation to others
“against a background of shared meaning and purpose”. Faith
16. The theorist who included a patient care component related to personal faith “to facilitate
progress toward achievement of personal spiritual goals” in “Criterion Measures of Patient
Care”. Faye Abdellah
17. The dimension measured in terms of the concepts of Personal Faith, Religious Practice, and
Spiritual Contentment. Spirituality
18. He proposed the different stages of faith development. James Fowler
19. They viewed the human person as “an incarnate being, always becoming, in relation with
men and things in a world of time and space”. Paterson and Zderad
20. The theorist who perceives religiosity or religious practice as potentially influencing all
dimensions of a person’s life view and functional capacity especially in terms of attitudes
and behaviors related to health and illness. Callista Roy
II. Matching Type: Match the age bracket in Column A with the Stage of Faith Development in
Column B then pair it with the correct description in Column C.
Column A Column B
Column A Column B Column C
F Infancy a. Conjunctive Time of opening to
Faith the voices of one’s
“deeper self”
D 3-6 years b. Universalizing A time of relating to
Faith the “imperatives of
absolute love and
justice”
E 7-12 years c. Individuative- Claiming a faith
Reflective Faith identity no longer
defined by the
composite of one’s
roles
G 13-20 years d. Intuitive- Imitative “fantasy-
Projective Faith filled period
C 21-30 years e. Mythic-Literal Internalization of
Faith “stories, beliefs,
and observances”
A 31-40 years f. Undifferentiated Seeds of trust,
Faith courage, hope, and
love are joined
B 40 years and above g. Synthetic- Describes
Conventional experiences outside
Faith the family unit
1. Infancy A. Conjunctive Faith
2. 3-6 years B. Universalizing Faith
3. 7-12 years C. Individuative-Reflective Faith
4. 13-20 years D. Intuitive-Projective Faith
5. 21-30 years E. Mythic-Literal Faith
6. 31-40 years F. Undifferentiated Faith
7. 40 years and above G. Synthetic-Conventional Faith
Column C
I.Internalization of “stories, beliefs, and observances”
I. Time of opening to the voices of one’s “deeper self”
I. Seeds of trust, courage, hope, and love are joined
V. A time of relating to the “imperatives of absolute love and justice”
V. Describes experiences outside the family unit
I. Claiming a faith identity no longer defined by the composite of one’s roles
I. Imitative “fantasy-filled period
III. Fill in the Blanks. Write the correct answer on the space provided.
Nursing
Alterations
Diagnosis
1. spiritual There is no hope of ever having a relationship with God, or of pleasing
despair Him
2. spiritual Frustration, anguish, or outrage at God for having allowed illness or other
anger trials
3. spiritual loss
Feelings of having temporarily lost or terminated the love of God
4. spiritual
alienation Verbalization that one has to depend upon oneself in times of trial or need
5. spiritual guilt Expressions suggesting that one has done things which were not pleasing
to God
6. spiritual
anxiety Worry that God is displeased with one’s behavior
7. spiritual pain
Discomfort or suffering relative to one’s relationship with God
8. spiritual Feeling that God seems very far away and remote from one’s everyday
alienation life
9. spiritual
anger Comments about the ‘unfairness’ of God
“Nursing is an art, and if it is to be made an art, it requires as exclusive a devotion, as hard a
preparation, as any painter’s or sculptor’s work. For what is having to do with dead canvas or cold
marble compared with having to do with the living body, the temple of God’s spirit.” -Florence
Nightingale