Spirituality often plays a critical role in health and wellness, yet few have explored in detail the process through which practitioners can identify and use clients’ spiritual strengths to their mutual advantage. To address this gap, this practice-oriented text equips helping professionals with the tools they need to administer spiritual assessments ethically and professionally. David R. Hodge outlines a number of assessment approaches, including an implicit method for evaluating ‘secular’ forms of spirituality. Case examples illustrate the implementation of these strategies in different clinical settings and with groups from diverse racial, geographic, and socioeconomic backgrounds.
Table of Content
Introduction
1. Understanding Spirituality and Religion
2. Rationales for Conducting a Spiritual Assessment
3. Brief Assessment
4. Guidelines for Moving to a Comprehensive Spiritual Assessment
5. Comprehensive Assessment and Spiritual Histories
6. Spiritual Lifemaps
7. Spiritual Genograms
8. Spiritual Eco-maps
9. Spiritual Ecograms
10. Implicit Spiritual Assessment
11. Conducting Spiritual Assessments
12. Summary of Key Points and Future Directions
References
Index
About the author
David R. Hodge, Ph.D., MSW, is a professor at Arizona State University’s School of Social Work. He also holds nonresident appointments at Duke University, Baylor University, and the University of Pennsylvania. An internationally recognized scholar of spirituality, religion, and culture, Hodge has written extensively on spiritual assessment and intervention with diverse groups.