Spiritual care for patients
When facilitating spiritual care for other patients with different worldviews, there will be many strengths and weaknesses resulting from my worldview. The strengths include the fact that expressing spirituality is inborn, and I can facilitate care through beliefs, values, and other practices that call for humanitarian actions (Bolt et al., 2019). An intrinsic desire for meaning would be driving me from the beginning to the end when providing care to people with varying worldviews. The desire is essential in reminding me of the major priorities of everyday life, such as providing care to others despite their opposing views. I further understand that every human being has a different spiritual nature, reliant on a certain faith. A diversified worldview is important, and through that concept, I can easily facilitate care to others despite what they value above other things. The provision of spiritual care would be facilitated by the fact that whether human beings are religious or not, they remain to be worshippers by nature. Weaknesses include the fact that I will take opposing views to make more money while providing care. At times, this means that the different worldviews might seem nonvaluable based on the beliefs and practices and therefore limiting the amount of spiritual care provided (Bolt et al., 2019). Furthermore, in the provision of care, religious practices are rooted in human behavior; thus, an individual will perceive care as better as per his or her behavior. If I were the patients,
the final say in a complex decision-making situation would be determined by my religious beliefs (Bolt et al., 2019). My spiritual formation is what will give me the actual character. The process happens to everyone, and therefore the caregiver will have to adhere to my desires. Confidentiality and consent are the ethical standards the caregiver will adhere to in addressing my needs in a difficult situation, meaning that I will not be coerced to act differently.