| Literature DB >> 28204980 |
Anke I Liefbroer1, Erik Olsman2,3,4, R Ruard Ganzevoort5, Faridi S van Etten-Jamaludin6.
Abstract
Although knowledge on spiritual care provision in an interfaith context is essential for addressing the diversity of patients' religious and spiritual needs, an overview of the literature is lacking. Therefore, this article reviews the empirical literature on interfaith spiritual care (ISC) in professional caring relationships. A systematic search in electronic databases was conducted to identify empirical studies published after 2000. Twenty-two studies were included. The quality of the included studies was assessed, and their results were thematically analyzed. The majority were conducted in North America, mainly using qualitative methods and focusing on professional caregivers, who had a variety of professional and spiritual backgrounds. Two core categories were identified: (1) normativity: reasons for (not) wanting to provide ISC, in which universalist and particularist approaches were identified; and (2) capacity: reasons for (not) being able to provide ISC, which included the competences that health care professionals may need when providing ISC, as well as contextual possibilities and restraints. This systematic review identifies gaps in the literature and indicates that future studies have to explore patient perspectives on ISC.Entities:
Keywords: Caregivers; Chaplaincy; Interfaith; Patients; Religion; Review; Spirituality
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28204980 PMCID: PMC5570787 DOI: 10.1007/s10943-017-0369-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Relig Health ISSN: 0022-4197
Fig. 1Flow chart
Characteristics of the included studies
| Author(s) (year) | Objective | Methods |
| Participants | Setting | Country |
| Risk of bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abu-Ras ( | To examine the roles of Muslim chaplains in health care settings, and in serving Muslim patients in particular | Survey + interviews | 56 + 33 | Pastoral care directors, chaplains (Muslim and non-Muslim) | Health care | US | + | Not described why using mixed methods was necessary and how the data are integrated |
| Abu-Ras and Laird ( | To examine Muslim and non-Muslim chaplains’ approaches of pastoral care with Muslim patients | Interviews | 33 | Chaplains (Muslim and non-Muslim) | Hospital | US | + | Poor description of data analysis |
| Cadge and Sigalow ( | To explore chaplains’ two main strategies when working with patients and families with a RS background other than their own | Interviews + pt observ | 20 | Chaplains (various RSa backgrounds) | Hospital | US | ± | Poor description of influence research team on research process; poor description of data collection and analysis |
| Carey and Davoren ( | To explore the interfaith pastoral care provided by Christian health care chaplains to patients and their families of non-Christian religions | Survey + interviews | 30 | Chaplains (Christian) | Hospital | AU | ± | Poor description of qualitative data analysis, small sample for quantitative part |
| Chui and Cheng ( | To explore the experiences of religious workers in Asian penitentiaries | Interviews | 17 | Prison chaplains, volunteers (Buddhist) | Prison | CN | ± | Poor description of influence research team on research process; poor description of data analysis |
| Ellis and Campbell ( | To explore the importance of concordant belief systems in patient–physician spiritual interactions | Interviews | 20 | Family physicians, (ambulatory) patients | Community health | US | ++ | None |
| Galek et al. ( | To examine the degree to which chaplains are more likely to pray with patients of their own religious faith | Correlational study | 82 | Chaplains, students (Christian, Jewish) | Hospital | US | ± | Poor description of sample and selection of sample; mainly students |
| Hodge and Lietz ( | To examine the utility of spiritually modified cognitive-behavioral therapy with the treatment of substance abuse | 6 focus groups | 40 | Therapists, clients | Various | US | + | Poor description of influence research team on research process |
| Kale ( | To examine how spiritual care is perceived by recording the lived experiences of palliative care workers at Hospice Africa Uganda | Interviews | 15 | Various palliative care workers (mainly Christian) | Hospital | UG | ± | Poor description of influence research team on research process; poor description of data analysis |
| Kellems et al. ( | To (1) gain information about therapy involving RS issues, (2) examine relationship between similarity of therapist–client RS and therapy process, (3) examine relationship between therapists’ level of personal RS commitment and importance they attach to specific RS goals/interventions, (4) examine the relationship of RS training to self-efficacy for working with RS issues, (5) explore how personal RS impacted therapists’ work with particular clients | Survey | 220 | University counseling center therapists (various RS backgrounds) | University | US | ++ | None |
| Kerley et al. ( | To study the narrative of prison chaplains and local religious congregants in order to learn more about the ministry workers responsible for the provision of faith-based prison programs | Interviews | 30 | Chaplains, religious congregants (Christian) | Prison | US | ± | Poor description of data analysis; no code tree |
| Magaldi-Dopman et al. ( | To offer an in-depth, qualitative examination of spiritual/religious/non-religious identity development among psychologists and its impact on their psychotherapy with clients | Interviews | 16 | Psychologists (various RS backgrounds) | Various | US | ++ | None |
| Mayers et al. ( | To explore the process of help-seeking and therapy among clients with religious or spiritual beliefs | Interviews | 10 | Clients (strong RS beliefs; various RS backgrounds) | Therapy | UK | ++ | None |
| Pesut and Reimer-Kirkham ( | To analyze the negotiation of religious and spiritual plurality in clinical encounters, and the contexts that shape that negotiation | Interviews + pt observ | 65 | Health care professionals, administrators, patients, family members | Hospital | CA | + | Poor description of the research team and relation of the research team with participants; poor description of data analysis |
| Pesut et al. ( | To examine the contributions of spiritual care providers in Canadian institutional health care contexts | Interviews | 21 | Spiritual care providers, volunteers (various RS backgrounds) | Hospital | CA | + | Poor description of influence research team on research process; poor description of data analysis |
| Reimer-Kirkham et al. ( | To examine the contexts of intercultural spiritual caregiving | Interviews + focus group | 6 | Nurses, chaplains | Hospital | CA | + | Small sample; no code tree |
| Reimer-Kirkham et al. ( | To examine the negotiation of religious and spiritual pluralism in health care, with a focus on the themes of “sacred” and “place” | Interviews + pt observ | 69 | Health care professionals, administrators, patients, family members | Hospital | CA | ± | Poor description of influence research team on research process; participant selection and data collection unclear |
| Sherwood ( | To use guided reflection to examine a written caregiving encounter to identify spiritual themes and interpret their influence on nursing practice | 5 focus groups | 40 | Nurses, student nurses | Hospital | US | + | None |
| Silton et al. ( | To obtain basic information from professional chaplains about their use of prayer with patients | 1 focus group | 8 | Chaplains (various RS backgrounds) | Hospital | US | ± | Poor description of influence research team on research process; small sample size |
| Sinclair et al. ( | To examine the factors affecting the practice of spiritual care programs or professional chaplains working within an oncology setting | Interviews + pt observ | X | Spiritual caregivers | Cancer center | US | ± | Poor description of influence research team on research process; poor description of data collection; no code tree |
| Taylor et al. ( | To describe how the religiosity of Christian nurses motivates their practice and manifests during patient care, especially spiritual care | Interviews | 14 | Nurses | Hospital | US | ++ | None |
| Wesley et al. ( | To analyze the roles and educational needs of hospice social workers regarding assessment and intervention in spirituality, religion, and diversity of their patients | Survey | 62 | Hospice social workers (Various RS backgrounds) | Hospice | US | + | Data collection via membership organization; limited response rate |
X, Not applicable; AU, Australia; CN, China; UG, Uganda; RS, Religious/spiritual; pt observ, participant observations; ±, moderate quality; +, good quality; ++, very good quality
aQuality was assessed using the following guidelines: Tong et al. (2007) for qualitative studies, Kelley et al. (2003) for quantitative studies, and Leech and Onwuegbuzie (2010) for mixed methods studies
Thematic analysis: normativity
| Normativity: Reasons for (not) wanting to provide ISC | Universalist approach | Example universalist approach | Other references | Particularist approach | Example particularist approach | Other references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Identity characterized by… | Openness to diverse perspectives | Several ministry workers enjoyed interacting with inmates from different faiths, because they feel it is intellectually and religiously rewarding to learn about different faith traditions (Kerley et al. | Cadge and Sigalow ( | Focus on specific faith | “Muslims should be treated as individuals with specific needs” (Abu-Ras and Laird | Chui and Cheng ( |
| Emphasizing importance of a spiritual care service for everyone | Faith-based service creates restrictions for people not identifying with that tradition (Sinclair et al. | Reimer-Kirkham et al. ( | Emphasizing risks of a spiritual care service for everyone | Risk of faith being challenged by learning about “different ways to God” (Carey and Davoren | Hodge and Lietz ( | |
| Relationships characterized by… | Spiritual connections across faiths | By discussing spiritual/religious topics in psychotherapy—even as an atheist psychologist—“a spiritual connection [was] formed, a feeling of the transcendent, or a ‘religious moment’ where they felt the presence of something larger than themselves” (Magaldi-Dopman et al. | Kellems et al. ( | Spiritual connection with same faith | Sharing the same belief system and cultural background facilitates spiritual interaction (Ellis and Campbell | Hodge and Lietz ( |
| Patients’ preferences that do not imply a specific faith | Most patients speak of wanting “kindness, respect, humor, and friendship” when asked about spiritual care by a caregiver (Pesut and Reimer-Kirkham | Abu-Ras and Laird ( | Patients’ preferences that imply a specific faith | Patients having strong R/S beliefs felt dilemmas about contacting secular health care services, because of fear it might be seen by God, others and themselves as a rejection of God’s healing, or they thought it would be impossible to discuss spiritual topics in therapy, or because of fear of “conversion” by “antireligious beliefs” (Mayers et al. | ||
| Fear of imposing own beliefs on client or being viewed as proselytizing | Both religious and secular therapists note the risk of “imposing their own personal beliefs,” thereby not respecting the clients’ autonomy (Hodge and Lietz | Kellems et al. ( | ||||
| Actions characterized by… | Prayer across faiths | Prayer was identified as an important tool “that could be shared with patients of all faiths, as it can be universal and non-denominational” (Kale | Silton et al. ( | Prayer and rituals with same faith | Some patients note they prefer a chaplain reciting prayers from their own tradition and discordant prayer might be a source of tension (Silton et al. | Abu-Ras and Laird ( |
Thematic analysis: capacity
| Capacity needed for providing ISC | Specification | Example | Other references |
|---|---|---|---|
| Competence | Strategies | Being able to neutralize and code-switch (Cadge and Sigalow | Pesut and Reimer-Kirkham ( |
| Knowledge/recognition | Care providers, when coming from a different religious/cultural background than their patients, might not recognize the importance of religion/religious practices for patients (Pesut and Reimer-Kirkham | Abu-Ras | |
| Context | Individual level—possibilities | Patients may experience the visit of someone of another tradition/religion as a privilege or honor (Silton et al. | None |
| Individual level—restraints | According to a Catholic chaplain, when visiting Catholic patients, “their expectations, and all the traditions get in the way” (Silton et al. | Cadge and Sigalow ( | |
| Institutional level—possibilities | A faith-based spiritual care service received no institutional funding, whereas for those services who used a non-denominational/multifaith approach, it was more likely to receive monetary support by the institution (Sinclair et al. | Ellis and Campbell ( | |
| Institutional level—restraints | None | None |