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The spiritual and religious identities, beliefs, and practices of academic pediatricians in the United States.

机译:美国学术儿科医生的精神和宗教身份,信念和做法。

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PURPOSE: Physicians' spiritual and religious identities, beliefs, and practices are beginning to be explored. The objective of this study was to gather descriptive information about personal religion and spirituality from a random sample of academic American pediatricians and to compare this information with similar data from the public. METHOD: In 2005, a Web-based survey of a random sample of 208 pediatrician faculty from 13 academic centers ranked by the US News & World Report as "honor roll" hospitals was conducted. Surveys elicited information about personal beliefs and practices as well as their influence on decisions about patient care and clinical practice. Multiple questions were replicated from the General Social Survey to enable comparisons with the public. Descriptive statistics were generated, and logistic regression analyses were conducted on relevant variables. RESULTS: Nearly 88% of respondents were raised in a religious tradition, but just 67.2% claimed current religious identification. More than half (52.6%) reported praying privately; additional spiritual practices reported included relaxation techniques (38.8%), meditation (29.3%), sacred readings (26.7%), and yoga (19%). The majority of academic pediatricians (58.6%) believed that personal spiritual or religious beliefs influenced their interactions with patients/colleagues. These odds increased 5.1-fold when academic pediatricians attended religious services monthly or more (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS: Compared with the American public, a notably smaller proportion of academic pediatricians reported a personal religious identity. The majority believed spiritual and religious beliefs influenced their practice of pediatrics. Whether secular or faith-based belief systems measurably modify academic pediatric practice is unknown.
机译:目的:医生的精神和宗教身份,信念和实践正在开始探索。这项研究的目的是从美国学术儿科医生的随机样本中收集有关个人宗教信仰和灵性的描述性信息,并将该信息与公众的类似数据进行比较。方法:2005年,对来自13个学术中心的208名儿科医生的随机样本进行了基于网络的调查,这些中心被《美国新闻与世界报道》评为“名誉”医院。调查得出有关个人信仰和行为的信息,以及它们对患者护理和临床实践决策的影响。从一般社会调查中复制了多个问题,以便与公众进行比较。生成描述性统计数据,并对相关变量进行逻辑回归分析。结果:将近88%的受访者是在宗教传统中长大的,但只有67.2%的人声称拥有当前的宗教认同。超过一半(52.6%)的人报告说自己在祈祷;报告的其他精神实践包括放松技巧(38.8%),冥想(29.3%),神圣的阅读(26.7%)和瑜伽(19%)。大多数学术儿科医生(58.6%)认为个人的精神或宗教信仰影响了他们与患者/同事的互动。当学术儿科医生每月或以上参加宗教仪式时,这些几率增加了5.1倍(P <.05)。结论:与美国公众相比,报告儿童具有个人宗教身份的学术儿科医生比例要小得多。大多数人认为精神和宗教信仰影响了他们的儿科实践。世俗或基于信仰的信仰系统是否可测量地改变了儿科学术实践尚不清楚。

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