Person contemplating the landscape at summer solstice sunset

21 June · World Day of Spiritual Health

World Day of Spiritual Health

A proposal by the UB–FSM Chair of Spiritual Health and Humanisation to promote spiritual health as an essential dimension of human wellbeing, from a secular, scientific and international perspective.

Promoting spiritual health as an essential dimension of integral wellbeing

The World Day of Spiritual Health has the mission of promoting spiritual health as an essential dimension of integral wellbeing, contributing to the humanisation of health and social systems and to the improvement of health outcomes.

This initiative aims to raise awareness of the value of living with meaning, purpose and connection — with oneself, with others and with the surrounding world — and to drive the integration of spiritual health into person-centred care models.

Open hands reaching towards the sun at sunset

Principles

Inclusion and secularity

Recognition and respect for the different expressions of spirituality, religious and non-religious, from a secular, plural and ethical perspective.

Dignity and compassion

Promotion of dignity and compassion to care for the human being in all their dimensions.

Cultural diversity

Appreciation of the plurality of spiritual traditions and expressions across the world.

Integral wellbeing

Promotion of connection with the transcendent, resilience and life purpose as protective health factors.

Ethics and humanisation

Linking spiritual health with bioethical reflection and person-centred care.

Participation and community

Active involvement of professionals, institutions and citizens in the promotion of spiritual health.

21 June

The proposal is to establish 21 June as the World Day of Spiritual Health

The summer solstice represents, across many cultures, a moment of renewal, balance and connection with nature and the vital cycle. This transcultural symbolism makes it a fitting date to promote reflection on meaning, purpose and integral wellbeing.

Research confirms that spiritual health directly influences health outcomes

The World Health Organization recognises spirituality as a dynamic aspect of human health in which people seek and express meaning and purpose, and experience connection with themselves, with others and with what they consider transcendent (WHO, 2013). The European Association for Palliative Care (EAPC) defines it operationally as the dynamic dimension of human life that relates the person — and the community — to meaning, purpose and transcendence, and to connection with oneself, others, nature and what is significant or sacred.

WHO, 2013 · EAPC / Best et al., BMC Palliative Care, 2020

371

scientific studies analysed

Systematic review · JAMA 2022

+2,500

interventions carried out

with patients · PAEL, FSM

+250

healthcare professionals supported

PAEL, FSM

The experience of the Lay Spirituality Care Programme (PAEL) at Fundació Sanitària Mollet has demonstrated the positive aspects of integrating spiritual health into clinical care.

A systematic review published in JAMA (2022), based on 371 scientific studies, concludes that spiritual care should be integrated into the care of seriously ill patients; that training in spiritual health must be incorporated into interdisciplinary teams; and that healthcare systems should include specialised professionals.

At a European level, the European Association for Palliative Care (EAPC) has established an official competency framework for training in spiritual care in interdisciplinary teams, arguing that all members of a clinical team — regardless of discipline — should have basic competencies in spiritual care, and that this training must be academic, multidisciplinary and accessible to all healthcare staff. (Best et al., BMC Palliative Care, 2020)

The relationship between spiritual health and

01

Resilience in the face of adversity

02

Mental health and emotional wellbeing

03

The moral wellbeing of healthcare professionals

04

The quality of clinical decision-making

Spiritual health is not a luxury or an add-on: it is a fundamental dimension of human wellbeing that no health system aspiring to humanisation can continue to ignore.

Dr. Wilfred McSherry · Staffordshire University
President, International Network for the Study of Spirituality (INSS)

SDGs — Agenda 2030

United Nations 2030 Agenda

The proposal falls within the framework of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. In particular:

SDG 3

Good health and well-being

SDG 4

Quality education

SDG 10

Reduced inequalities

SDG 16

Peace, justice and strong institutions

The driving force

UB-FSM Chair of Spiritual Health and Humanisation

The creation of the UB–FSM Chair of Spiritual Health and Humanisation provides the academic and scientific framework needed to promote this initiative on an international scale. A space for research, training and knowledge transfer driven by the Universitat de Barcelona and the Fundació Sanitària Mollet, it works to integrate the spiritual dimension into clinical practice from a secular, salutogenic and interdisciplinary perspective.

Trees reflected in golden water at sunset

Join the proposal

Academic, health and social institutions: endorse the initiative

Help spread and develop it internationally. Every institution that endorses it strengthens the recognition of spiritual health as an essential dimension of human wellbeing.