Abstract

Collaboration within the recently established Network for Research on Spirituality and Health (NERSH) has made it possible to pool data from 14 different surveys from six continents. All surveys are largely based on the questionnaire by Curlin “Religion and Spirituality in Medicine, Perspectives of Physicians” (RSMPP). This article is a methodological description of the process of building the International NERSH Data Pool. The larger contours of the data are described using frequency statistics. Five subscales in the data pool (including the already established DUREL scale) were tested using Cronbach’s alpha and Principal Component Analysis (PCA) in an Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA). 5724 individuals were included, of which 57% were female and the mean age was 41.5 years with a 95% confidence interval (CI) ranging from 41.2 to 41.8. Most respondents were physicians (n = 3883), nurses (n = 1189), and midwives (n = 286); but also psychologists (n = 50), therapists (n = 44), chaplains (n = 5), and students (n = 10) were included. The DUREL scale was assessed with Cronbach’s alpha (α = 0.92) and PCA confirmed its reliability and unidimensionality. The new scales covering the dimensions of “Religiosity of Health Professionals (HPs)” (α = 0.89), “Willingness of Physicians to Interact with Patients Regarding R/S Issues” (α = 0.79), “Religious Objections to Controversial Issues in Medicine” (α = 0.78), and “R/S as a Calling” (α = 0.82), also proved unidimensional in the PCAs. We argue that the proposed scales are relevant and reliable measures of religious dimensions within the data pool. Finally, we outline future studies already planned based on the data pool, and invite interested researchers to join the NERSH collaboration.

Highlights

  • Through more than a decade researchers from around the world have studied the religious and spiritual (R/S) values of health professionals (HP), a process catalyzed by the questionnaire “Religion and Spirituality in Medicine: Physicians’ Perspectives” (RSMPP) developed by Farr

  • The RSMPP was translated into seven languages and research teams from around the world published their national findings in the following decade [6,12,13,14,15,16,17,18]

  • Alterations made to existing items and/or options threatened compatibility between the samples, addition of new items raised questions about whether to include the new items to the Network for Research on Spirituality and Health (NERSH) data pool; and removal of original RSMPP items in the later questionnaires weakened the power of the items for later comparisons in the data pool

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Summary

A Methodological Description of a Data

Pool of Religious and Spiritual Values of Health Professionals from Six Continents. Alex Kappel Kørup 1,2, *, René dePont Christensen 1 , Connie Thurøe Nielsen 2 , Jens Søndergaard 1 , Nada A Alyousefi 3 , Giancarlo Lucchetti 4 , Klaus Baumann 5 , Eunmi Lee 5 , Azimatul Karimah 6 , Parameshwaran Ramakrishnan 7,8 , Eckhard Frick 9,10 , Arndt Büssing 11,12 , Esther Schouten 13 and Niels Christian Hvidt 1,12. Academy of Geriatric Cancer Research (AgeCare), Odense University Hospital, 5000 Odense C, Denmark. Received: 3 October 2016; Accepted: 9 February 2017; Published: 15 February 2017

Introduction
Background
Data Collection
Ensuring Option Compatibility
Frequency of Church Attendance
Religious Affiliation
Medical Specialties
Occupation
Exclusion Criteria
Selection of Variables for The Data Pool
Data Management
Reliability Tests
Religiosity of HPs
Religious Objections to Controversial Issues in Medicine
Limitations
Findings
Strengths
Full Text
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