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COMPAR-EU Εργαλεία Web
The FACIT-Sp was developed in the 1990s to address the need for a brief, broad measure of spiritual well-being with content not limited to any one religious or spiritual tradition. In addition to the four subscales of the FACT-G (physical well-being, social/family well-being, emotional well-being and functional well-being), it consists of 12 items and three sub-domains of spiritual well-being, which help facilitate an in-depth exploration of the components that constitute spiritual well-being (peace, meaning, and faith).
Year: 2011
Authors: Bredle et al.
Disease: Heart Failure
Outcome: Quality of life
See more tools that use this outcome Measure: Quality of life
See more tools that use this measure Number of RCTs that used this tool (in our study): 1
See the RCTs Scale: Higher scores are better Reference: Bredle, J. M., Salsman, J. M., Debb, S. M., Arnold, B. J., & Cella, D. (2011). Spiritual well-being as a component of health-related quality of life: the functional assessment of chronic illness therapy—spiritual well-being scale (FACIT-Sp). Religions, 2(1), 77-94.
See more tools that use this outcome Measure: Quality of life
See more tools that use this measure Number of RCTs that used this tool (in our study): 1
See the RCTs Scale: Higher scores are better Reference: Bredle, J. M., Salsman, J. M., Debb, S. M., Arnold, B. J., & Cella, D. (2011). Spiritual well-being as a component of health-related quality of life: the functional assessment of chronic illness therapy—spiritual well-being scale (FACIT-Sp). Religions, 2(1), 77-94.
Target population: General population
Focus Generic
Translations available: Yes
Original version validated: Yes
Original language: English
Form of delivery: Self-reported
Licence needed: No
10.3390/rel2010077