Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, 633 Third Avenue, 4th floor, New York, NY, 10017, USA.
School of Nursing, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
Support Care Cancer. 2024 Aug 13;32(9):586. doi: 10.1007/s00520-024-08773-z.
To understand multidisciplinary healthcare clinicians' meaningful and challenging experiences providing spiritual care to patients with cancer and their care partners.
Multidisciplinary clinicians who participated in a communication training program supported by the National Cancer Institute or a palliative care training for nurses (N = 257) responded to two, open-ended questions about meaningful and challenging experiences of providing spiritual care. A thematic analysis of responses using an iterative, inductive approach was conducted until saturation was reached.
Participants from nursing (68%), social work (22%), and chaplaincy (10%) responded to open-ended survey questions. Three themes related to meaningful experiences of providing spiritual care emerged: building authentic interpersonal connection with patients and care partners; creating intentional space for patients and care partners to inform spiritual care; and actively supporting patients and care partners in their processes with spirituality. Three themes related to challenging experiences of providing spiritual care emerged: contextual factors and clinical circumstances complicate provision of spiritual care; facing barriers to providing high-quality, patient-centered care; and navigating ethical and logistical issues that affect spiritual and other care.
Clinicians derive meaning from a range of experiences throughout their provision of spiritual care to patients with cancer. However, they also face many challenges in delivering person-centered spiritual care in cancer settings, with some challenges reflecting significant gaps in spiritual care knowledge and training. Findings can guide future training and educational endeavors for multidisciplinary clinicians in the domain of spiritual care.
了解多学科医疗保健临床医生在为癌症患者及其护理伙伴提供精神关怀方面的有意义和具有挑战性的经历。
参与由美国国立癌症研究所(National Cancer Institute)支持的沟通培训计划或护士姑息治疗培训(N=257)的多学科临床医生回答了两个关于提供精神关怀的有意义和具有挑战性的经历的开放式问题。使用迭代的、归纳的方法对回答进行主题分析,直到达到饱和。
来自护理(68%)、社会工作(22%)和牧师(10%)的参与者回答了开放式调查问题。提供精神关怀有意义的体验有三个主题:与患者和护理伙伴建立真实的人际联系;为患者和护理伙伴创造有意的精神关怀空间;积极支持患者和护理伙伴的精神进程。提供精神关怀具有挑战性的体验有三个主题:背景因素和临床情况使精神关怀的提供变得复杂;面临提供高质量、以患者为中心的护理的障碍;以及解决影响精神和其他护理的伦理和后勤问题。
临床医生从为癌症患者提供精神关怀的一系列经历中获得意义。然而,他们在提供癌症环境中的以人为本的精神关怀方面也面临许多挑战,其中一些挑战反映了精神关怀知识和培训方面的重大差距。研究结果可以为精神关怀领域的多学科临床医生的未来培训和教育努力提供指导。