Policies of religious hospitals in the US are beginning to affect the way primary care physicians carry out their responsibilities in the US.
They are beginning to be disturbed by the policies of religious hospitals in the US. As many as ten per cent of them would prefer to refer patients under their care to another institutions when their judgement conflicts with the policies of the hospitals they are working in.Religious hospitals represent nearly 20 percent of the health care system in the country, it may be noted.
Younger and less religious physicians are more likely to experience these conflicts than their older or more religious peers, say researchers from the University of Chicago report in a paper published early online in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.
Study author Debra Stulberg, MD, instructor of family medicine and of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Chicago said, "… we know little about how religious policy affects the care doctors give to patients. This study is the first to systematically ask physicians whether religious hospital policies conflict with their judgment. We found that for a significant number of physicians, they do."
The study surveyed a representative sample of U.S. family physicians, general internists and general practitioners in 2007. Physicians were asked whether they had worked in a religiously-affiliated hospital or practice, if so, whether they had ever faced a conflict with the hospital or practice over religious policies for patient care, and what a physician ought to do if a patient should need a medical intervention and the hospital in which the physician works prohibits that intervention because of its religious affiliation.
Responses showed that 43 percent of primary care physicians have practiced in a religiously-affiliated setting. Of these, 19 percent experienced conflict with religious policies.
Advertisement
"Primary care physicians routinely see patients facing reproductive health or end-of-life decisions that may be restricted in religious health care institutions, so we were not surprised to learn that nearly one in five of the physicians who have worked in a religious setting have faced a conflict with their hospital," Stulberg said.
Advertisement
"We found that the physicians who work in religious hospitals and practices are a diverse group, from a wide range of religious and personal backgrounds," she added, "so hospitals sponsored by a specific religious denomination have providers who may not share their beliefs."
The Greenwall Foundation and the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine funded this story. Additional authors include Ryan Lawrence and Farr Curlin of the University of Chicago and Jason Shattuck of Michigan State.
Source-Medindia
GPL