GPs and spiritual care: signed up or souled out? A quantitative analysis of GP trainers' understanding and application of the concept of spirituality

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Standard

GPs and spiritual care : signed up or souled out? A quantitative analysis of GP trainers' understanding and application of the concept of spirituality. / Appleby, Alistair; Swinton, John; Bradbury, Ian; Wilson, Philip.

I: Education for Primary Care, Bind 29, Nr. 6, 2018, s. 367-375.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Appleby, A, Swinton, J, Bradbury, I & Wilson, P 2018, 'GPs and spiritual care: signed up or souled out? A quantitative analysis of GP trainers' understanding and application of the concept of spirituality', Education for Primary Care, bind 29, nr. 6, s. 367-375. https://doi.org/10.1080/14739879.2018.1531271

APA

Appleby, A., Swinton, J., Bradbury, I., & Wilson, P. (2018). GPs and spiritual care: signed up or souled out? A quantitative analysis of GP trainers' understanding and application of the concept of spirituality. Education for Primary Care, 29(6), 367-375. https://doi.org/10.1080/14739879.2018.1531271

Vancouver

Appleby A, Swinton J, Bradbury I, Wilson P. GPs and spiritual care: signed up or souled out? A quantitative analysis of GP trainers' understanding and application of the concept of spirituality. Education for Primary Care. 2018;29(6):367-375. https://doi.org/10.1080/14739879.2018.1531271

Author

Appleby, Alistair ; Swinton, John ; Bradbury, Ian ; Wilson, Philip. / GPs and spiritual care : signed up or souled out? A quantitative analysis of GP trainers' understanding and application of the concept of spirituality. I: Education for Primary Care. 2018 ; Bind 29, Nr. 6. s. 367-375.

Bibtex

@article{a2c38a76f04a41cbb32b42eb336821ae,
title = "GPs and spiritual care: signed up or souled out? A quantitative analysis of GP trainers' understanding and application of the concept of spirituality",
abstract = "GPs have a wide range of attitudes to spirituality which contribute to variations in reported spiritual care. Study aims were: to assess concepts of spirituality and their application in a sample of GP trainers; explore statistically the relationship between personal spiritual affiliation, attitudes to, and reported practice of, spiritual care and; to examine whether GP trainers consider training in spiritual care to be adequate. Questionnaire involving 87 GP trainers using Likert scale responses and multinomial trend tests to analyse the relationships between 'concept of spirituality' and attitude to, or practice of, spiritual care. Cluster and latent class analysis to investigate whether groups of GPs are categorically different. Results were GPs largely considered spirituality to be a meaningful, useful, but unclear concept. 8% did not wish involvement in spiritual care, 27.6% had reservations, 46% were pragmatically willing and 12.6% expressed keenness. 35.6% reported they tend not to discuss spiritual matters. Latent class analysis suggests two groups exist: two thirds being pragmatic supporters of spiritual care and one third are tentative sceptics. GPs vary widely in their attitude to, and practice of spiritual care. Only 10.3% reported receiving adequate training in spiritual care.",
keywords = "Attitude of Health Personnel, Cultural Characteristics, General Practitioners/psychology, Humans, Religion, Spirituality, United Kingdom",
author = "Alistair Appleby and John Swinton and Ian Bradbury and Philip Wilson",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1080/14739879.2018.1531271",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "367--375",
journal = "Education for Primary Care",
issn = "1473-9879",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - GPs and spiritual care

T2 - signed up or souled out? A quantitative analysis of GP trainers' understanding and application of the concept of spirituality

AU - Appleby, Alistair

AU - Swinton, John

AU - Bradbury, Ian

AU - Wilson, Philip

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - GPs have a wide range of attitudes to spirituality which contribute to variations in reported spiritual care. Study aims were: to assess concepts of spirituality and their application in a sample of GP trainers; explore statistically the relationship between personal spiritual affiliation, attitudes to, and reported practice of, spiritual care and; to examine whether GP trainers consider training in spiritual care to be adequate. Questionnaire involving 87 GP trainers using Likert scale responses and multinomial trend tests to analyse the relationships between 'concept of spirituality' and attitude to, or practice of, spiritual care. Cluster and latent class analysis to investigate whether groups of GPs are categorically different. Results were GPs largely considered spirituality to be a meaningful, useful, but unclear concept. 8% did not wish involvement in spiritual care, 27.6% had reservations, 46% were pragmatically willing and 12.6% expressed keenness. 35.6% reported they tend not to discuss spiritual matters. Latent class analysis suggests two groups exist: two thirds being pragmatic supporters of spiritual care and one third are tentative sceptics. GPs vary widely in their attitude to, and practice of spiritual care. Only 10.3% reported receiving adequate training in spiritual care.

AB - GPs have a wide range of attitudes to spirituality which contribute to variations in reported spiritual care. Study aims were: to assess concepts of spirituality and their application in a sample of GP trainers; explore statistically the relationship between personal spiritual affiliation, attitudes to, and reported practice of, spiritual care and; to examine whether GP trainers consider training in spiritual care to be adequate. Questionnaire involving 87 GP trainers using Likert scale responses and multinomial trend tests to analyse the relationships between 'concept of spirituality' and attitude to, or practice of, spiritual care. Cluster and latent class analysis to investigate whether groups of GPs are categorically different. Results were GPs largely considered spirituality to be a meaningful, useful, but unclear concept. 8% did not wish involvement in spiritual care, 27.6% had reservations, 46% were pragmatically willing and 12.6% expressed keenness. 35.6% reported they tend not to discuss spiritual matters. Latent class analysis suggests two groups exist: two thirds being pragmatic supporters of spiritual care and one third are tentative sceptics. GPs vary widely in their attitude to, and practice of spiritual care. Only 10.3% reported receiving adequate training in spiritual care.

KW - Attitude of Health Personnel

KW - Cultural Characteristics

KW - General Practitioners/psychology

KW - Humans

KW - Religion

KW - Spirituality

KW - United Kingdom

U2 - 10.1080/14739879.2018.1531271

DO - 10.1080/14739879.2018.1531271

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30339055

VL - 29

SP - 367

EP - 375

JO - Education for Primary Care

JF - Education for Primary Care

SN - 1473-9879

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 217944066