Evaluation of a Spiritual History with Elderly Multi-Morbid Patients in General Practice—A Mixed-Methods Study within the Project HoPES3
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- To what extent do patients accept the offer to get involved in an SH?
- What do patients talk about when invited to speak about their spirituality?
- What are the positive and negative effects of the SH from the patients’ point of view?
- What do patients recommend to their doctors after having taken part in the SH?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Reflexivity
2.3. Context and Theoretical Framework
2.4. Recruitment of the Trial Participants
2.5. Data Collection for the Process Evaluation
2.6. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Characteristics of the Sample
3.2. Results of Survey and Interviews
PAT: Then she asked me what I drew my strength from. She also knows a bit about something like that from my life. So right now, with the family, with my children, whenever there is a problem, I can talk to her about it. And then I also told her about my faith, I am a New Apostolic, and that I draw a lot of strength from there and that I can also turn to God with confidence when things get really tight and difficult.
PAT: Well, she got everything out of me in terms of my life, what ambitions I have, how I (.) things like religiosity and environment and neighbors. Well, so she looked at everything that was going on in my life.INT: And how did you feel about the conversation?PAT: Very good.
PAT: Well, I just think through the conversation you get to know each other better or she’ll know a little more about me, like my life’s journey, and well, I think that is very positive for further treatments, so, I found that very good.INT: Does it continue to have an effect?PAT: Er, yes. In this respect, because then you (...) that increases your trust in the doctor.
PAT: I was comfortable with that. Well, because then, it is so open then, this barrier is broken if you can talk to the doctor about everything.PAT: Well, I don’t see any more inhibitions there. (…)PAT: I can come in and can, can simply say when help is urgently needed.
PAT: But now I don’t feel the same pressure anymore like I used to. When I had to see the doctor my blood pressure was already very high. And I don’t have that anymore. (.) In relation to this. If I’ve got something I need to see her for, (.) I don’t have this outburst anymore, right? 160, 180 blood pressure, just by walking through the door.
PAT: Well, but you know (.) doctors don’t have the time. That you have very long conversations (2 s) that, well, especially to get to know someone, it is certainly not unimportant, but (3 s), well, I don’t think the time is there, on the doctor’s side.
PAT: Yes, everything voluntarily.INT: Voluntariness is important to you?PAT: Yes, exactly.INT: And based on this experience, do you have any recommendations for your doctor? If he should, should he even address such things or, if so, how? Do you have anything where you say ...PAT: That actually depends on the patient, whether they are willing to respond. So it will differ from case to case, I really don’t want to give any judgment, let’s put it that way. He addressed it, I accepted the offer. With the next patient …that is up to each individual patient.
INT: Would you have a recommendation for doctors based on your experiences now with these conversations?PAT: They should start listening attentively, if the patients somehow (-)er, bring up this kind of thing.INT: A doctor should pay attention to that and then respond to it?PAT: Yes, pay attention to that, exactly. And if, maybe, I don’t know how this will be, whether problems will come up or something like that, or if he feels very bad, something like that, then go into it.
4. Discussion
5. Strengths and Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. SPIR Guideline
Appendix B. Interview Guide (Process Evaluation Spiritual History Only)
- Have you had a conversation with your primary care physician in the last few months about spirituality or about what gives you personal strength and meaning in life?
- If no: Why not?
- If yes: How was this conversation for you and how did you feel about it?
- Please tell me how you felt after the conversation
- Did you do anything new or different afterward?
- Did the conversation have any further impact or aftermath for you?
- Did the conversation have an impact on your relationship with your primary care physician?
- What would you recommend to physicians based on your experience with this conversation?
- What is spirituality for you?
- How would you describe your personal spirituality?
- What do you take away from the study for the future?
- Would you like to see all primary care practices offer a program like the HoPES3 study for older patients?
Appendix C. Quotes in Original Language
PAT: Sie hat dann auch mich gefragt, woraus ich so Kraft schöpfe. Sie kennt auch ein bisschen, so in etwa schon mal so etwas aus meinem Leben. Also jetzt gerade von der Familie, von Kindern, wo es da immer mal ein Problem gibt, wo ich auch mit ihr drüber reden kann. Und ich habe ihr dann auch gesagt, dass ich eigentlich aus meinem Glauben, ich bin neuapostolisch, dass ich da also sehr viel Kraft schöpfe und mich auch vertrauensvoll dann an den lieben Gott wenden kann, wenn es mal ganz eng und schwer wird.PAT: Ja sie hat alles aus, aus mir rausgeholt was mein Leben betrifft, welche Ambitionen ich so habe, wie ich, (.) so etwas Religiöses und Umfeld und Nachbarn. Und sie hat also alles so sich angeguckt, was bei mir los ist.INT: Und wie ging es Ihnen da so mit dem Gespräch?PAT: Sehr gut.PAT: Ja, ich denke einfach man lernt sich durch das Gespräch noch besser kennen oder sie weiß dann etwas mehr von mir, so meinen Lebensweg, und ja. Ich denke, das ist sehr positiv auch für weitere Gespräche oder Behandlungen, also ja, das fand ich jetzt sehr gut.INT: Hat da vielleicht noch etwas nachgewirkt?PAT: Ähh, ja. Insofern, weil man dann ein (…) dass man größeres Vertrauen zum Arzt bekommt.PAT: Mir war das angenehm. Also eben, weil es dann so offen, da, da ist dann diese Barriere aufgebrochen, wenn man mit dem Doktor auch über alles reden kann.PAT: Also, ich sehe da jetzt keine Hemmschwelle mehr drin.INT: Keine Hemmschwelle mehr. Mhm, genau.PAT: Ich kann da rein und kann, kann einfach sagen, wo es brennt.PAT: Aber ich habe jetzt nicht mehr den Druck so wie vorher, wenn ich zum Doktor musste war mein Blutdruck ja schon ganz oben.INT: Ja.PAT: Und das habe ich jetzt nicht mehr. (.) Also was sich auf dieses bezieht. Wenn ich irgendetwas habe, wo ich zu ihr rein muss, (.) da habe ich nicht mehr diesen Ausbruch, ne? 160, 180 Blutdruck, bloß, weil ich da zur Tür reingehe.PAT: Ja, aber wissen Sie, (.) die Zeit haben die Ärzte ja nicht. Dass, dass man da so ewig lange Gespräche führt, die, ja, gerade zum Kennenlernen des Menschen ist sicherlich nicht unwichtig, aber (3 s), ja, ich glaube nicht, dass die Zeit da ist, vom Arzt her.PAT: Anbieten, jaINT:.MhmPAT: Ja, alles freiwilligINT: Ja, Freiwilligkeit ist Ihnen wichtig?PAT: Ja, genauINT: Und aufgrund dieser Erfahrung, hätten Sie irgendeine Empfehlung an Ihren Arzt? Wenn er, ob er überhaupt solche Dinge ansprechen soll oder, wenn ja, wie? Haben Sie da irgendetwas, wo Sie sagen...PAT: Ne, also ich muss, muss immer im, das kommt eigentlich auf den Patienten drauf an, ob er, ob er bereit ist darauf einzugehen. Also das ist von Fall zu Fall verschieden, da möchte ich eigentlich puuh kein, kein Urteil drüber abgeben, sagen wir es mal so. Er hat mich darauf angesprochen, ich bin darauf eingegangen. Beim nächsten Patient (xxx). Das liegt bei jedem Patienten selber.INT: Würden Sie… hätten Sie eine Empfehlung an Ärzte, aufgrund Ihrer Erfahrungen, jetzt mit diesen Gesprächen?PAT: Die sollen hellhörig werden, wenn die, wenn die Patienten irgendwie (--) ähm, dementsprechend Sachen von sich geben.INT: Da soll ein Arzt drauf achten und dann drauf eingehen?PAT: Ja, drauf achten genau, genau. Und wenn äh, eventuell, ich weiß jetzt nicht wie das ist, ob Probleme kommen oder irgendwie sowas, oder wenn er sich sehr schlecht fühlt, sowas irgendwie, dann darauf eingehen.
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Written Survey Only | Interview | Total | p-Value (Written Survey Only vs. Interview) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Number of patients | 107 (100%) | 29 (100%) | 136 (100%) | - |
Participated in written survey | 107 (100%) | 26 (89.7%) | 133 (97.8%) | - |
Mean age in years (range, SD) | 78.37 (70–91, 4.59) | 76.83 (70–85, 4.68) | 78.04 (70–91, 4.64) | 0.120 a |
Female n (%) | 61 (57.0%) | 13 (44.8%) | 74 (54.4%) | 0.243 b |
Living alone n (%) | 36 (35.6%) 6 missings | 7 (24.1%) 3 missings | 43 (32.3%) 9 missings | 0.402 b |
Highest level of education n (%) | 0.055 b | |||
Primary and secondary school education | 89 (88.1%) | 18 (62.1%) | 104 (78.1%) | |
High school (German final school exams) | 4 (4.0%) | 2 (6.9%) | 6 (4.7%) | |
University degree | 8 (7.9%) | 6 (20.7%) | 14 (11.0%) | |
Missings | 6 missings | 3 | 3 missings | |
Mean number of medications (range, SD) | 7.67 (3–17, 3.43) | 8.00 (3–20, 3.68) | 7.74 (3–20, 3.47) | 0.669 a |
Religion n (%) | 0.877 b | |||
Christian | 89 (88.1%) | 23 (85.2%) | 112 (87.5%) | |
Other | 5 (5.0%) | 2 (7.4%) | 7 (5.5%) | |
No religion | 7 (6.9%) | 2 (7.4%) | 9 (7.0%) | |
Missings | 6 missings | 2 missings | 8 missings |
% (n) | |
---|---|
1. Have you had a conversation with your GP in the last 2 weeks about your personal sources of strength and/or faith issues? | |
No | 7.5 (10) |
Yes | 92.5 (123) |
Missing | 0.0 (0) |
2. How long did this conversation last? | |
1–10 min | 17.3 (23) |
11–20 min | 44.4 (59) |
21–30 min | 18.8 (25) |
>30 min | 12.0 (16) |
Missing | 7.5 (10) |
3. How helpful did you find the conversation? | |
Not at all | 2.3 (3) |
A Little | 31.6 (42) |
Quite | 33.8 (45) |
Very | 24.1 (32) |
Missing | 8.3 (11) |
4. How stressful did you find the conversation? | |
Not at all | 73.7 (98) |
A Little | 15.8 (21) |
Quite | 1.5 (2) |
Very | 0.8 (1) |
Missing | 8.3 (11) |
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Mächler, R.; Sturm, N.; Frick, E.; Schalhorn, F.; Stolz, R.; Valentini, J.; Krisam, J.; Straßner, C. Evaluation of a Spiritual History with Elderly Multi-Morbid Patients in General Practice—A Mixed-Methods Study within the Project HoPES3. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 538. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010538
Mächler R, Sturm N, Frick E, Schalhorn F, Stolz R, Valentini J, Krisam J, Straßner C. Evaluation of a Spiritual History with Elderly Multi-Morbid Patients in General Practice—A Mixed-Methods Study within the Project HoPES3. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(1):538. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010538
Chicago/Turabian StyleMächler, Ruth, Noemi Sturm, Eckhard Frick, Friederike Schalhorn, Regina Stolz, Jan Valentini, Johannes Krisam, and Cornelia Straßner. 2022. "Evaluation of a Spiritual History with Elderly Multi-Morbid Patients in General Practice—A Mixed-Methods Study within the Project HoPES3" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 1: 538. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010538
APA StyleMächler, R., Sturm, N., Frick, E., Schalhorn, F., Stolz, R., Valentini, J., Krisam, J., & Straßner, C. (2022). Evaluation of a Spiritual History with Elderly Multi-Morbid Patients in General Practice—A Mixed-Methods Study within the Project HoPES3. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(1), 538. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010538