University of British Columbia, Okanagan, FIN 344, 3333 University Way, Kelowna, BC, Canada V1V 1V7.
Int J Nurs Stud. 2010 Jul;47(7):815-25. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2009.11.014.
Despite increasingly diverse, globalized societies, little attention has been paid to the influence of religious and spiritual diversity on clinical encounters within healthcare.
The purpose of the study was to analyze the negotiation of religious and spiritual plurality in clinical encounters, and the social, gendered, cultural, historical, economic and political contexts that shape that negotiation.
Qualitative: critical ethnography.
The study was conducted in Western Canada between 2006 and 2009. Data collection occurred on palliative, hospice, medical and renal in-patient units at two tertiary level hospitals and seven community hospitals.
Participants were recruited through purposive sampling and snowball technique. Twenty healthcare professionals, seventeen spiritual care providers, sixteen patients and families and twelve administrators, representing diverse ethnicities and religious affiliations, took part in the study.
Data collection included 65 in-depth interviews and over 150h of participant observation.
Clinical encounters between care providers and recipients were shaped by how individual identities in relation to religion and spirituality were constructed. Importantly, these identities did not occur in isolation from other lines of social classification such as gender, race, and class. Negotiating difference was a process of seeing spirituality as a point of connection, eliciting the meaning systems of patients and creating safe spaces for the expression of that meaning.
The complexity of religious and spiritual identity construction and negotiation raises important questions about language and about professional competence and boundaries in clinical encounters where religion and spirituality are relevant concerns.
尽管社会日益多样化和全球化,但几乎没有关注宗教和精神多样性对医疗保健临床接触的影响。
本研究旨在分析临床接触中宗教和精神多样性的协商,以及塑造这种协商的社会、性别、文化、历史、经济和政治背景。
定性:批判民族志。
本研究于 2006 年至 2009 年在加拿大西部进行。数据收集发生在两家三级医院和七家社区医院的姑息治疗、临终关怀、内科和肾内科住院病房。
参与者通过目的性抽样和滚雪球技术招募。20 名医疗保健专业人员、17 名精神护理提供者、16 名患者及其家属以及 12 名管理人员参加了研究,代表了不同的种族和宗教背景。
数据收集包括 65 次深度访谈和 150 多小时的参与式观察。
护理提供者和接受者之间的临床接触受到个体宗教和精神身份构建方式的影响。重要的是,这些身份不是与性别、种族和阶级等其他社会分类线隔离的。协商差异是一个将精神视为联系点的过程,引出患者的意义系统,并为表达该意义创造安全空间。
宗教和精神身份构建和协商的复杂性提出了关于语言以及宗教和精神相关问题的临床接触中的专业能力和界限的重要问题。