
Psychiatrists: Least Religious But Most
Interested In Patients' Religion
December 11, 2007
Although psychiatrists are among the least religious physicians, they seem to be
the most interested in the religious and spiritual dimensions of their patients,
according to survey data published in the December issue of the American
Journal of Psychiatry.
Ever since Freud described religious faith as an illusion and a neurosis there
has been tension and at times hostility between religion and psychiatry.
Psychiatrists are less religious on average than other physicians, according to
previously published data from the same survey, and non-psychiatrist physicians
who are religious are less willing to refer their patients to psychiatrists.
This report found that although they may be less religious than other
physicians, psychiatrists appear to be more comfortable and have more experience
addressing religious or spiritual concerns in the clinical setting.
"Recent efforts have begun to bridge the divide between religion and
psychiatry," said study author Farr Curlin, MD, assistant professor of
medicine at the University of Chicago. "In the past, manuals of psychiatry
tended to identify religiosity with mental illness. Now they distinguish normal
religious and spiritual ideas and behaviors from those that result from mental
illness."
"Moreover," he added, "several recent studies have found that
religiosity is often associated with improved mental health outcomes such as
quicker recovery from depression. Now most training programs teach developing
psychiatrists about the potentially beneficial influence of religion and
spirituality on patients' mental health."
For this paper, the researchers examined results from a survey of 100
psychiatrists and 1,044 non-psychiatrists from across the United States.
Respondents were asked their opinions about the relationship between religion
and health and about how they address religious and spiritual issues in their
clinical practices.
"Is the influence of religion/spirituality on health positive or
negative?" was one question. "Considering your experience, how often
to you think religion/spirituality causes guilt, anxiety or other negative
emotions that lead to increased patient suffering?"
The researchers found that psychiatrists are twice as likely (46% versus 23%) as
other physicians to say that patients often mention spiritual issues. They are
also much more likely to both say that it is appropriate to ask patients about
spiritual concerns (93% vs 53%) and that they do inquire (87% vs 49%).
The differences are striking with respect to the mental health conditions most
often encountered by non-psychiatrists. Only 14 percent of non-psychiatrist
physicians say they often ask patients suffering from anxiety or depression
about spiritual issues, compared to 44 percent of psychiatrists.
"Psychiatrists and non-psychiatrists alike tend to say that the influence
of religion on health is generally positive," said Curlin. Almost all
physicians agreed that religion and spirituality often give patients a positive,
hopeful state of mind. More than 75 percent of psychiatrists and
non-psychiatrist agreed that religion "often or always" helps patients
cope with their illnesses.
About a third of both groups, however, reported that religion sometimes leads
patients not to comply with their doctors' recommendations and to avoid taking
responsibility for their own health. Psychiatrists were almost twice as likely
as other physicians to say that the influence of religion on health is equally
positive and negative (21% versus 12%), and were more likely to say that
religion/spirituality sometimes causes guilt, anxiety, or other negative
emotions that lead to increased patient suffering (82% versus 44%).
During a clinical encounter, however, psychiatrists appear to be more
comfortable talking to their patients about spiritual issues. They are more
likely than other physicians to believe it is appropriate for a physician to
discuss such issues when a patient brings them up (97% versus 91%) and to
regularly encourage patients in their own religious ideas and experiences (83%
versus 73%).
When patients do bring up spiritual concerns, psychiatrists are less likely to
try to change the subject (9% versus 26%), and they are less likely feel
uncomfortable discussing such issues or to be worried about offending patients.
Psychiatrists rarely pray with patients, however; only 6% say they do so
sometimes, compared to 20% of other physicians.
This study, the first of its kind, "highlights the extraordinary silence in
the literature regarding religion and spirituality as both healing and
pathologic elements in the lives of psychiatric patients," noted
psychiatrist Burr Eichelman, MD, PhD, of the University of Wisconsin, in an
editorial.
The results "surprised us," said Curlin. "Among physicians in
general, those who are less religious are generally less likely to believe it is
appropriate to discuss spiritual issues," he noted. "Yet we find that
psychiatrists are at the same time the least religious physicians and the
physicians most comfortable addressing patients' spiritual concerns."
Why would psychiatrists be so open to patients' religious and spiritual issues?
The researchers suggest that it may be because several mental illnesses are
known to be associated with hyper-religiosity, and because psychiatrists are at
times asked to evaluate patients' decisional capacity when religious beliefs
collide with medical advice.
"In aggregate," Curlin said, "although psychiatrists may not
agree with the claims of religion, they often witness its powerful effects on
patients' mental health, both for good and for ill."
That psychiatrists pay attention to patients' spiritual concerns "is
welcome news," he said. "By paying attention to patients' spiritual
concerns, psychiatrists may help patients identify the resources in their own
religious traditions that can them cope with the suffering caused by mental
illness."
Psychiatry, Eichelman noted, has developed "a fairly substantial curriculum
on another previously taboo life process - human sexuality - but we have only
recently ventured into prescribing religious or spiritual 'awareness' in our
training programs."
"The division between psychiatry and religion may be narrowing,"
Curlin said. "The historical antagonism appears to be waning."
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Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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The Greenwall Foundation and the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program
funded this research. Additional authors include Ryan Lawrence, Shaun Odell,
Marshall Chin, and John Lantos of the University of Chicago, and Harold Koenig
and Keith Meador of Duke University.
Source: John Easton
University of Chicago
Medical Center
Medical News Today: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com
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