- Haemodialysis patients exhibited high death anxiety despite reporting mild depression and stress and moderate anxiety.
- Spiritual needs correlated positively with death anxiety but were not significantly associated with depression, anxiety or stress.
- Spiritual needs independently predicted death anxiety after controlling for psychological distress, indicating integration of spiritually sensitive existential care into haemodialysis services.
J Relig Health. 2026 Jun 27. doi: 10.1007/s10943-026-02716-0. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
This descriptive and correlational study was conducted with 131 patients undergoing hemodialysis in Eastern Turkey to examine levels of spiritual needs, psychological distress, and death anxiety, as well as the relationships among these variables and predictors of death anxiety. The participants reported mild levels of depression and stress and moderate levels of anxiety. The mean score on the Templer Death Anxiety Scale indicated a high level of death anxiety (M = 8.80, SD = 1.88). Spiritual needs, assessed via a contamination-adjusted measure, were positively associated with death anxiety but were not significantly related to depression, anxiety, or stress. Hierarchical regression analysis revealed that spiritual needs significantly predict death anxiety even after controlling for psychological distress. These findings suggest that spiritual needs represent a distinct existential dimension in hemodialysis patients and play a unique role in shaping fear of death. Integrating spiritually sensitive and existentially informed care into hemodialysis services may help reduce death-related distress and support psychological well-being in this population.
PMID:42371389 | DOI:10.1007/s10943-026-02716-0
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