| Literature DB >> 31839718 |
Mara Taverna1, Pascal O Berberat2, Heribert Sattel1, Eckhard Frick1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Teaching about spirituality and health is recommended by the American Association of Medical Colleges and partially implemented in some US medical schools as well as in some faculties of other countries. We systematically surveyed Medical School Associate Deans for Student Affairs (ADSAs) in three German-speaking countries, assessing both projects on and attitudes towards Spiritual Care (SC) and the extent to which it is addressed in undergraduate (UME), graduate (GME), and continuing (CME) medical education (in this article, UME is understood as the complete basic medical education equivalent to college and Medical School. GME refers to the time of residency).Entities:
Keywords: existential; hidden curriculum; medical education; religious; spiritual care
Year: 2019 PMID: 31839718 PMCID: PMC6904885 DOI: 10.2147/AMEP.S224679
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Med Educ Pract ISSN: 1179-7258
Figure 1Included medical schools (study flowchart).
Figure 2Perceived importance of spiritual care aspects in patients´ treatment.
Figure 3Implementation of spiritual care teaching on different levels of the education program (multiple choice).
Topics Currently Taught in the Spiritual Care Context (Undergraduate Medical Education, Multiple Choice)
| Teaching Content | n |
|---|---|
| Doctor–patient communication | 12 |
| Perception of spiritual aspects of the patient | 12 |
| Handling seriously ill patients and their relatives | 11 |
| Difference between religiousness and spirituality | 10 |
| Definition of spirituality | 9 |
| Handling spiritual/religious aspects of the patient | 9 |
| Breaking bad news | 9 |
| Grief/mourning/bereavement | 9 |
| Spiritual self-assessment | 5 |
| Spiritual anamnesis | 5 |
| Role of spirituality in the health care system | 4 |
| Others | 2 |
Topics the Respondents Would Like to Strengthen in Undergraduate Medical Education (Multiple Choice)
| Teaching Content Needs | n |
|---|---|
| Role of spirituality in the health care system | 9 |
| Finding and self-evaluation of own spirituality | 9 |
| Perception of spiritual aspects of the patient | 9 |
| Spiritual self-assessment | 9 |
| Grief/mourning/bereavement | 8 |
| Handling spiritual/religious aspects of the patient | 7 |
| Doctor–patient communication | 6 |
| Spiritual anamnesis | 5 |
| Definition of spirituality | 5 |
| Difference between religiousness and spirituality | 5 |
| Breaking bad news | 4 |
| Others | 1 |
Improving SC Teaching in Medical Schools (Repondents’ Suggestions Summarized)
Definitions of specific learning goals in the forthcoming UME masterplan |
Embedding SC in the clinical routine |
Sensitization about this subject in the UME, GME, and CME using “train the trainers” meetings |
Identifying SC subjects in ME fields not explicitly dedicated to SC |
Integration of SC into Disease-Management Programs |
Fostering the matching between patients 'spiritual needs and health professionals' spiritual competence |
Learning from SC in the palliative context and transferring this knowledge to other clinical and ME fields |
“It should be seen as an integral part of caregiving/practice and not some sort of odd special add-on” |
Patients’ Perspective and Doctors’/Students’ Perspective Categories
| Category | Quotes |
|---|---|
| Patients’ perspective | For patients whose spiritual needs arise during their illness spiritual care can give comfort in case of seriously ill and dying outcomes |
| The spiritual side of a disease is usually the part which receives less attention, while exactly this side is perceived as the most relevant by the patient. | |
| Through spiritual care, patients can also get to learn self-care. | |
| Spiritual care should be integrated as a basic element in the medical approach to the disease. | |
| Health professionals’ perspective | Spiritual care can contribute to seeing the human being as a whole, and a regular teaching of this subject should help students be better prepared for the clinical practice. |
| The international shift of the society demands more and more skills in this direction. | |
| Physicians suffer from high burn-out rates and lack of self-care in the clinical setting. Promoting spiritual care in the sense of self-care and resilience could positively affect doctors and therefore patient’s well-being. |