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Spiritual intelligence: a scoping review on the gateway to mental health.

Cristina Teixeira PintoLúcia GuedesSara PintoRui Manuel Lopes Nunes
Published in: Global health action (2024)
Spiritual Intelligence (SI) is an independent concept from spirituality, a unifying and integrative intelligence that can be trained and developed, allowing people to make use of spirituality to enhance daily interaction and problem solving in a sort of spirituality into action. To comprehensively map and analyze current knowledge on SI and understand its impact on mental health and human interactions, we conducted a scoping review following the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology, searching for 'spiritual intelligence' across PubMedCentral, Scopus, WebOfScience, and PsycInfo. Quantitative studies using validated SI instruments and reproducible methodologies, published up to 1 January 2022, were included. Selected references were independently assessed by two reviewers, with any disagreements resolved by a third reviewer. Data were extracted using a data extraction tool previously developed and piloted. From this search, a total of 69 manuscripts from 67 studies were included. Most studies ( n  = 48) were conducted in educational ( n  = 29) and healthcare ( n  = 19) settings, with the Spiritual Intelligence Self Report Inventory (SISRI-24) emerging as the predominant instrument for assessing SI ( n  = 39). Analysis revealed several notable correlations with SI: resilience ( n  = 7), general, mental, and spiritual health ( n  = 6), emotional intelligence ( n  = 5), and favorable social behaviors and communication strategies ( n  = 5). Conversely, negative correlations were observed with burnout and stress ( n  = 5), as well as depression and anxiety ( n  = 5). These findings prompt a discussion regarding the integration of the SI concept into a revised definition of health by the World Health Organization and underscore the significance of SI training as a preventative health measure.
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