All Stories

  1. Approaching the religious patient in forensic psychiatry, with special focus on ethnic minority patients
  2. What brings meaning to life in a highly secular society? A study on sources of meaning among Danes
  3. Targeted prevention in primary care aimed at lifestyle-related diseases: a study protocol for a non-randomised pilot study
  4. First child’s impact on parental relationship: an existential perspective
  5. Developing and evaluating a course programme to enhance existential communication with cancer patients in general practice
  6. Spiritual needs of mothers with sick new born or premature infants—A cross sectional survey among German mothers
  7. How participatory action research changed our view of the challenges of shared decision-making training
  8. Psychiatry, a Secular Discipline in a Postsecular World? A Review
  9. Religious Coping in a Christian Minority Group
  10. ‘We are the barriers’: Danish general practitioners’ interpretations of why the existential and spiritual dimensions are neglected in patient care
  11. Religiousness and health in Europe
  12. Development of the EMAP tool facilitating existential communication between general practitioners and cancer patients
  13. Risk aversion and religious behaviour: Analysis using a sample of Danish twins
  14. Guilt without fault: A qualitative study into the ethics of forgiveness after traumatic childbirth
  15. Chronic Neurodegenerative Illnesses and Epilepsy in Danish Adventists and Baptists: A Nationwide Cohort Study
  16. The International NERSH Data Pool—A Methodological Description of a Data Pool of Religious and Spiritual Values of Health Professionals from Six Continents
  17. Was ist spirituell an der Medizin?
  18. Glaube versetzt Berge – Berge versetzen Glauben
  19. Use of Sedatives, Antidepressants and Antipsychotic Medicine among Seventh-day Adventists and Baptists in Denmark
  20. Psychosocial health and well-being among obstetricians and midwives involved in traumatic childbirth
  21. The existential dimension in general practice: identifying understandings and experiences of general practitioners in Denmark
  22. Where is God in my dying? A qualitative investigation of faith reflections among hospice patients in a secularized society
  23. The NERSH International Collaboration on Values, Spirituality and Religion in Medicine: Development of Questionnaire, Description of Data Pool, and Overview of Pool Publications
  24. Faith Moves Mountains—Mountains Move Faith: Two Opposite Epidemiological Forces in Research on Religion and Health
  25. Healthcare professionals’ perspectives on traumatic childbirth - interpreting the data
  26. Blame and guilt - a mixed methods study of obstetricians' and midwives' experiences and existential considerations after involvement in traumatic childbirth
  27. Association between sexually transmitted disease and church membership. A retrospective cohort study of two Danish religious minorities
  28. Prayer and meditation among Danish first time mothers—a questionnaire study
  29. Religious Transformation Among Danish Pentecostals Following Personal Crisis and Group Psychotherapy: A Qualitative Study
  30. For and against Organ Donation and Transplantation: Intricate Facilitators and Barriers in Organ Donation Perceived by German Nurses and Doctors
  31. Differences in Religiousness in Opposite-Sex and Same-Sex Twins in a Secular Society
  32. Poster presentations
  33. Risk for cardiovascular disease among Seventh-day Adventists and Baptists in Denmark, 1977–2009
  34. Personal Prayer in Patients Dealing with Chronic Illness: A Review of the Research Literature
  35. Making existential meaning in transition to motherhood—A scoping review
  36. Spirituality and Health
  37. Existential Meaning Among First-Time Full-Term and Preterm Mothers
  38. Experience of gratitude, awe and beauty in life among patients with multiple sclerosis and psychiatric disorders
  39. Abstracts
  40. Spiritual Needs among Patients with Chronic Pain Diseases and Cancer Living in a Secular Society
  41. Religiousness and Religious Coping in a Secular Society: The Gender Perspective
  42. Psychiatric disease incidence among Danish Seventh-day Adventists and Baptists
  43. Familial Resemblance in Religiousness in a Secular Society: A Twin Study
  44. Secular, Spiritual, and Religious Existential Concerns of Women with Ovarian Cancer during Final Diagnostics and Start of Treatment
  45. Aspects of Spirituality in Medical Doctors and Their Relation to Specific Views of Illness and Dealing with Their Patients' Individual Situation
  46. Attachment Theory and Spirituality: Two Threads Converging in Palliative Care?
  47. Spiritually and Religiously Integrated Group Psychotherapy: A Systematic Literature Review
  48. Cancer incidence among Danish Seventh-day Adventists and Baptists
  49. Six Understandings of the Word ‘Spirituality’ in a Secular Country
  50. The Danish religious societies health study
  51. Research on meaning-making and health in secular society: Secular, spiritual and religious existential orientations
  52. Abstracts of the IPOS 11th World Congress of Psycho-Oncology
  53. Religion and reduced cancer risk – What is the explanation? A review
  54. Christian Prophecy
  55. Patient belief in miraculous healing