Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago-Pritzker School of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2011 Nov;26(11):1265-71. doi: 10.1007/s11606-011-1781-y. Epub 2011 Jul 1.
Little is known about how often patients desire and experience discussions with hospital personnel regarding R/S (religion and spirituality) or what effects such discussions have on patient satisfaction. OBJECTIVE, DESIGN AND PARTICIPANTS: We examined data from the University of Chicago Hospitalist Study, which gathers sociodemographic and clinical information from all consenting general internal medicine patients at the University of Chicago Medical Center.
Primary outcomes were whether or not patients desired to have their religious or spiritual concerns addressed while hospitalized, whether or not anyone talked to them about religious and spiritual issues, and which member of the health care team spoke with them about these issues. Primary predictors were patients' ratings of their religious attendance, their efforts to carry their religious beliefs over into other dealings in life, and their spirituality.
Forty-one percent of inpatients desired a discussion of R/S concerns while hospitalized, but only half of those reported having such a discussion. Overall, 32% of inpatients reported having a discussion of their R/S concerns. Religious patients and those experiencing more severe pain were more likely both to desire and to have discussions of spiritual concerns. Patients who had discussions of R/S concerns were more likely to rate their care at the highest level on four different measures of patient satisfaction, regardless of whether or not they said they had desired such a discussion (odds ratios 1.4-2.2, 95% confidence intervals 1.1-3.0).
These data suggest that many more inpatients desire conversations about R/S than have them. Health care professionals might improve patients' overall experience with being hospitalized and patient satisfaction by addressing this unmet patient need.
对于患者在多大程度上希望并经历与医院人员就宗教/精神(R/S)进行讨论,以及此类讨论对患者满意度的影响,人们知之甚少。
目的、设计和参与者:我们研究了芝加哥大学住院医师研究的数据,该研究从芝加哥大学医疗中心的所有同意接受普通内科治疗的患者中收集社会人口统计学和临床信息。
主要结果是患者是否希望在住院期间解决其宗教或精神问题,是否有人与他们讨论宗教和精神问题,以及医疗团队的哪个成员与他们讨论这些问题。主要预测因素是患者对其宗教活动的评价、他们努力将宗教信仰融入生活中的其他方面以及他们的精神状态。
41%的住院患者希望在住院期间讨论 R/S 问题,但只有一半的患者报告有过此类讨论。总体而言,32%的住院患者报告曾讨论过他们的 R/S 问题。宗教信仰患者和经历更严重疼痛的患者更有可能既希望又进行精神问题的讨论。无论是否希望进行此类讨论,进行 R/S 问题讨论的患者更有可能在四项不同的患者满意度测量中对其护理给予最高评价(比值比 1.4-2.2,95%置信区间 1.1-3.0)。
这些数据表明,希望进行宗教/精神问题讨论的住院患者比实际进行此类讨论的患者多得多。医疗保健专业人员可以通过满足这一未满足的患者需求,改善患者的整体住院体验和患者满意度。