Spirituality, Religiosity, and Health: a Comparison of Physicians’ Attitudes in Brazil, India, and Indonesia

Giancarlo Lucchetti, - and Parameshwaran Ramakrishnan, - and Azimatul Karimah, - and Gabriela R. Oliveira, - and Amit Dias, - and Anil Rane, - and A. Shukla, - and S. Lakshmi, - and B. K. Ansari, - and R. S. Ramaswamy, - and Rajender A. Reddy, - and Antoinette Tribulato, - and Anil K. Agarwal, - and Jagadish Bhat, - and Namburu Satyaprasad, - and Mushtaq Ahmad, - and Pasupuleti Hanumantha Rao, - and Pratima Murthy, - and Kuntaman, - and Harold G. Koenig, - and Alessandra L. G. Lucchetti, - (2022) Spirituality, Religiosity, and Health: a Comparison of Physicians’ Attitudes in Brazil, India, and Indonesia. Journal of Religion and Health, 52. pp. 188-194. ISSN 00224197

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Official URL: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12529-0...

Abstract

Background One of the biggest challenges in the spirituality, religiosity, and health field is to understand how patients and physicians from different cultures deal with spiritual and religious issues in clinical practice. Purpose The present study aims to compare physicians’ perspectives on the influence of spirituality and religion (S/R) on health between Brazil, India, and Indonesia. Method This is a cross-sectional, cross-cultural, multi-center study carried out from 2010 to 2012, examining physicians’ attitudes from two continents. Participants completed a self-rated questionnaire that collected information on sociodemographic characteristics, S/R involvement, and perspectives concerning religion, spirituality, and health. Differences between physicians’ responses in each country were examined using chi-squared, ANOVA, and MANCOVA. Results A total of 611 physicians (194 from Brazil, 295 from India, and 122 from Indonesia) completed the survey. Indonesian physicians were more religious and more likely to address S/R when caring for patients. Brazilian physicians were more likely to believe that S/R influenced patients’ health. Brazilian and Indonesians were as likely as to believe that it is appropriate to talk and discuss S/R with patients, and more likely than Indians. No differences were found concerning attitudes toward spiritual issues. Conclusion Physicians from these different three countries had very different attitudes on spirituality, religiosity, and health. Ethnicity and culture can have an important influence on how spirituality is approached in medical practice. S/R curricula that train physicians how to address spirituality in clinical practice must take these differences into account.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Medical education, Physician attitudes, Religion and medicine, Spirituality
Subjects: R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
R Medicine > RC Internal medicine > RC475-489 Therapeutics. Psychotherapy
Divisions: 01. Fakultas Kedokteran > Psikiatri Anak dan Remaja (Sub Spesialis)
Creators:
CreatorsNIM
Giancarlo Lucchetti, -UNSPECIFIED
Parameshwaran Ramakrishnan, -UNSPECIFIED
Azimatul Karimah, -NIDN8880900016
Gabriela R. Oliveira, -UNSPECIFIED
Amit Dias, -UNSPECIFIED
Anil Rane, -UNSPECIFIED
A. Shukla, -UNSPECIFIED
S. Lakshmi, -UNSPECIFIED
B. K. Ansari, -UNSPECIFIED
R. S. Ramaswamy, -UNSPECIFIED
Rajender A. Reddy, -UNSPECIFIED
Antoinette Tribulato, -UNSPECIFIED
Anil K. Agarwal, -UNSPECIFIED
Jagadish Bhat, -UNSPECIFIED
Namburu Satyaprasad, -UNSPECIFIED
Mushtaq Ahmad, -UNSPECIFIED
Pasupuleti Hanumantha Rao, -UNSPECIFIED
Pratima Murthy, -UNSPECIFIED
Kuntaman, -NIDN0007075106
Harold G. Koenig, -UNSPECIFIED
Alessandra L. G. Lucchetti, -UNSPECIFIED
Depositing User: arys fk
Date Deposited: 30 Apr 2023 14:54
Last Modified: 30 Apr 2023 14:54
URI: http://repository.unair.ac.id/id/eprint/125794
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