Warren Alpert Medical School, Brown University (G.A.,B.K.), Providence, Rhode Island; Hope Hospice and Palliative Care Rhode Island (G.A.), Providence, Rhode Island.
Nova Southeastern College of Osteopathic Medicine (J.R.), Florida.
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2021 Dec;62(6):1216-1228. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2021.05.013. Epub 2021 May 26.
Spiritual care (SC) is central to palliative care. However, a mismatch between patients' desire for SC and physicians' SC provision remains. The shortage of specialty-trained palliative physicians, necessitates that all physicians provide primary palliative care, including SC. Although several quantitative studies explore physicians' barriers to SC, few qualitative studies and no longitudinal studies exist.
To gain in-depth understanding of factors influencing physicians' ability to provide SC over time.
A 20-year longitudinal, individual interview study. In study year-1, we interviewed all residents in a USA primary care residency (full study-group) regarding SC beliefs, experiences and skills. The longitudinal study-group (PGY1 subgroup) was interviewed again in study-years 3, 11, and 20. Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed. Four researchers analyzed transcripts using a grounded theory approach. IRB approval was obtained.
We analyzed 66 interviews from 34 physicians. Physicians had diverse personal spiritual beliefs. Seven themes emerged from both groups (response rate 89%): patients' needs; practice setting; beliefs regarding physician's role; personal spiritual beliefs; SC training; life experiences (professional, personal); self-care and reflection. Longitudinal interviews revealed thematic evolution and interactions over 20-years: patients' needs and physicians' belief in whole-person care remained primary motivators; cross-cultural SC communication training diminished impact of personal spiritual beliefs and worries; life experiences enhanced SC skills; work environment helped or hindered SC provision; and spiritual self-care/reflection fostered patient-centered, compassionate SC.
Facilitating SC provision by nonpalliative care specialists is complex and may require both individual and systems level interventions fostering motivation, SC skill development, and supportive work environments.
精神关怀(SC)是姑息治疗的核心。然而,患者对 SC 的需求与医生提供 SC 的意愿之间仍存在不匹配的情况。由于专业的姑息治疗医师短缺,所有医师都需要提供基本的姑息治疗,包括 SC。虽然有几项定量研究探讨了医师提供 SC 的障碍,但定性研究和纵向研究较少。
深入了解影响医师提供 SC 能力的因素随时间的变化。
一项为期 20 年的纵向、个人访谈研究。在研究的第 1 年,我们对美国初级保健住院医师中的所有住院医师(全研究组)进行了关于 SC 信念、经验和技能的访谈。纵向研究组(PGY1 亚组)在研究的第 3、11 和 20 年再次接受了访谈。访谈进行了录音并转录。四名研究人员使用扎根理论方法分析了转录本。获得了 IRB 的批准。
我们分析了来自 34 名医师的 66 次访谈。医师具有不同的个人精神信仰。两组都出现了 7 个主题(回应率 89%):患者的需求;实践环境;关于医师角色的信念;个人精神信仰;SC 培训;生活经历(专业的,个人的);自我保健和反思。纵向访谈揭示了 20 年来的主题演变和相互作用:患者的需求和医师对整体关怀的信念仍然是主要的推动因素;跨文化 SC 沟通培训减少了个人精神信仰和担忧的影响;生活经历增强了 SC 技能;工作环境有助于或阻碍了 SC 的提供;而精神自我保健/反思则促进了以患者为中心的富有同情心的 SC。
由非姑息治疗专家促进 SC 的提供是复杂的,可能需要个人和系统层面的干预措施来促进动机、SC 技能的发展和支持性的工作环境。