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Journal of Clinical Oncology, Vol 25, No 5 (February 10), 2007: pp. 555-560 © 2007 American Society of Clinical Oncology. DOI: 10.1200/JCO.2006.07.9046 Religiousness and Spiritual Support Among Advanced Cancer Patients and Associations With End-of-Life Treatment Preferences and Quality of Life
From the Harvard Radiation Oncology Program; Center for Psycho-Oncology and Palliative Care Research, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; Department of Psychiatry, Brigham and Womens Hospital; Department of Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; Harvard Medical School Center for Palliative Care, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; and Palliative Care Service, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX Address reprint requests to Tracy A. Balboni, MD, MPH, Harvard Radiation Oncology Program, 375 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115; e-mail: tbalboni{at}partners.org
Purpose: Religion and spirituality play a role in coping with illness for many cancer patients. This study examined religiousness and spiritual support in advanced cancer patients of diverse racial/ethnic backgrounds and associations with quality of life (QOL), treatment preferences, and advance care planning. Methods: The Coping With Cancer study is a federally funded, multi-institutional investigation examining factors associated with advanced cancer patient and caregiver well-being. Patients with an advanced cancer diagnosis and failure of first-line chemotherapy were interviewed at baseline regarding religiousness, spiritual support, QOL, treatment preferences, and advance care planning. Results: Most (88%) of the study population (N = 230) considered religion to be at least somewhat important. Nearly half (47%) reported that their spiritual needs were minimally or not at all supported by a religious community, and 72% reported that their spiritual needs were supported minimally or not at all by the medical system. Spiritual support by religious communities or the medical system was significantly associated with patient QOL (P = .0003). Religiousness was significantly associated with wanting all measures to extend life (odds ratio, 1.96; 95% CI, 1.08 to 3.57). Conclusion: Many advanced cancer patients spiritual needs are not supported by religious communities or the medical system, and spiritual support is associated with better QOL. Religious individuals more frequently want aggressive measures to extend life.
Increasing recognition that technical interventions incompletely engage the issues encountered in life-threatening illness1,2 has resulted in a growing incorporation of other parameters of health into cancer care, including religion and spirituality.3,4 The National Cancer Institute defines religion as a set of beliefs and practices associated with a religion or denomination, and defines spirituality as the search for ultimate meaning through religion or other paths.3 In the Handbook of Religion and Health, Koenig et al5 similarly highlight the considerable overlap and the distinct characteristics of religion and spirituality. Following this conceptualization, both terms are used when encompassing both domains: religion and/or spirituality (R/S), whereas when emphasizing one of these domains, the individual term is used (eg, spiritual support and religious activities). Between 50% and 95% of cancer patients view R/S as personally important6-10 and experience spiritual needs,11-13 particularly minority patients.13 Research demonstrates an association between R/S and improved coping and quality of life (QOL).14-18 Negative religious coping (eg, perceiving illness as divine punishment) can also arise in the setting of illness and is associated with distress and QOL decrements.14,19,20 The National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative Care, a consortium of palliative care organizations establishing national palliative care guidelines, includes attention to patient R/S as one of eight clinical practice domains. These guidelines provide a framework for providing spiritual supportcare that acknowledges patient R/S and attends to spiritual needsin a clinical setting. However, little is known about how life-threatening illness influences needs for and experiences of spiritual support, how religiousness affects end-of-life treatment preferences, and how spiritual support influences QOL.4 In this study, advanced cancer patients were interviewed to assess religiousness and R/S activities before and after the cancer diagnosis, support of spiritual needs by the medical system and by religious communities, the association of spiritual support with patient quality of life, and the relationship of religiousness to treatment preferences and advance care planning.
Study Sample Patients were recruited from August 1, 2002, to August 25, 2005, as part of the Coping With Cancer Study, a multi-institutional investigation of advanced cancer patients and their primary (unpaid) caregivers. Participating sites include Yale Cancer Center (New Haven, CT), Veterans Affairs Connecticut Healthcare System Comprehensive Cancer Clinics (West Haven, CT), Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (New York, NY), Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Care Center (Dallas, TX), and Parkland Hospital Palliative Care Service (Dallas, TX).
Inclusion criteria were diagnosis of advanced cancer (expected prognosis of < 1 year) and failure of first-line chemotherapy; diagnosis at a participating site; age
Study Measures Religiousness and spiritual support. Patients rated the importance of religion to them and the frequency of their religious service attendance and private R/S activities (eg, prayer) before and after the cancer diagnosis. Patients assessed support of their spiritual needs by a religious community (eg, clergy, members of a congregation) on a scale from 1 (not at all) to 5 (completely supported). Patients similarly evaluated support of their spiritual needs by the medical system (eg, doctors, nurses, chaplains). Overall spiritual support (OSS) was assessed as a sum of the answers to these two questions (possible scores, 2 to 10). Patients reported whether they had received visits from a chaplain or from clergy outside of a medical setting. Comfort received from pastoral visits was also assessed. Terms such as religion and spiritual support were not defined for patients to encompass the variety of patient R/S. Appendix Table A1 (online only) lists the religiousness and spiritual support questions. Religious coping. Pargaments Brief RCOPE22 (14 items) assessed positive religious coping (eg, I have been looking for a stronger connection with God) and negative religious coping (eg, I have been wondering whether God has abandoned me). QOL. The McGill Quality of Life questionnaire23 (16 items) assessed patient QOL. It is designed to measure QOL at all stages of life-threatening illness and has been validated previously.23,24 Other patient variables. Age, sex, race/ethnicity, education, and insurance status were reported by the patient. Disease information was obtained from chart review. Zubrod performance score was determined by physician assessment. Patients were also asked whether they wanted all measures to extend life, if they had a living will (LW) or a durable power of attorney (DPOA), and if they had completed a do not resuscitate (DNR) order.
Statistical Analysis
Sample Characteristics Of 538 eligible patients, 338 were enrolled. The most common reasons for nonparticipation included "not interested" (n = 94), "caregiver refuses" (n = 27), and "too upset" (n = 18). Nonparticipants were more likely to be white (73% v 62%; P = .01), older (60.9 v 57.1 years; P = .002), and to report more distress (2.76 v 2.40; P = .005) on a scale from 1 (minimal to no distress) to 5 (extreme distress). Participants and nonparticipants did not differ significantly by sex or education. Sixty-seven patients accrued at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center were excluded because it was not a participating site for all measures; some measures were added in a subsequent grant. An additional 41 patients had missing data. The characteristics of the sample patients (N = 230) are described in Table 1. Of 100 participants from southern institutions, 61% were nonwhite, and of 130 participants from northeastern sites, 22% were nonwhite (P < .0001).
Religiousness and Religious Activities Religion was considered very important by 156 participants (68%), somewhat important by 47 participants (20%), and not important by 27 participants (12%). More African Americans (89%) and Hispanics (79%) reported religion to be very important compared with whites (59%; P = .001 and P = .03, respectively). Increasing patient-reported distress at the time of study recruitment was significantly associated with increasing religiousness (P = 0.01), whereas age was not associated with religiousness (P = 0.53). Fifty-six percent attended religious services once a month or more before their cancer diagnosis. This decreased to 44% after the cancer diagnosis (P = .0002). Private R/S activities were performed at least daily by 47% before their diagnosis and by 61% after the diagnosis (P < .0001).
Support of Advance Cancer Patient Spiritual Needs A total of 133 patients (52%) had received visits from chaplains or other clergy. Most whites (83%), African Americans (94%), and Hispanics (100%) stated that the pastoral visit provided some comfort or a lot of comfort. Four patients (3%) reported that the visit made them uncomfortable.
Relationship of Spiritual Support to QOL and Religiousness to Treatment Preferences and Advance Care Planning
Table 4 lists patient treatment preferences and advance care planning. In MVA, increasing religiousness was associated with preferring all measures to extend life (odds ratio [OR], 1.96; 95% CI, 1.08 to 3.57). Although in univariate analysis increasing religiousness was negatively associated with having a LW or a DPOA, in adjusted analyses the effect was no longer significant; only nonwhite race/ethnicity was significantly inversely related to the likelihood of completing a LW or a DPOA (OR, 0.23; 95% CI, 0.12 to 0.44). On MVA, religiousness was not significantly associated with having a DNR order; only nonwhite race/ethnicity (OR, 0.41; 95% CI, 0.20 to 0.82) and northeastern site (OR, 0.42; 95% CI, 0.21 to 0.85) were inversely related to having a DNR order.
This study demonstrates that religion is important to most advanced cancer patients, particularly to African Americans and Hispanics. Yet many patients become less able to participate in religious communities after becoming ill. Although private religious activities may address some spiritual needs, many advanced cancer patients do not have support from a religious community or from the medical system at a particularly vulnerable period of their illness trajectory. Our study showed that support of patients spiritual needs was associated with an important clinical outcomeimproved QOL. Furthermore, we uncovered a provocative association between religiousness and desires for aggressive treatment to extend life. The finding that religion was important to most participants is consistent with prior studies of cancer patients6-10 and with the finding that 96% of US adults express a belief in God and 70% identify religion as one of the most important influences in their lives.25 Furthermore, as in other studies,26,27 African Americans and Hispanics rated religion as important more frequently than whites. Patients reported a decrease in religious service attendance after their cancer diagnosis consistent with prior studies,28,29 and they indicated a corresponding increase in private R/S activities. The finding that patients private R/S activities increase may reflect patients decreasing ability to attend religious services or that patients are seeking a deeper religiousness or spirituality at the end of life. Roberts et al,10 in a study of 108 women with gynecologic malignancies, found that 49% reported becoming more religious after their diagnosis, with none becoming less religious. As life-threatening illness confronts individuals with the reality and proximity of their mortality, R/S meaning may become increasingly important to patients at the end of life. Spiritual needs were minimally supported by religious communities for approximately half of the participants, with support being greatest among African Americans. In addition, most patients reported that the medical system (including chaplains) provides little spiritual support. With pastoral visits usually representing only a sliver of the medical experience and physicians infrequently addressing R/S issues with patients,30-33 many patients might view their medical experience as devoid of spiritual support. Numerous barriers prevent physicians from contributing to the provision of spiritual support at the end of life. These include the more recent historical development of a separation between R/S and medicine.5 Support for maintaining this separation is largely based on the concern that physicians might impose a specific set of R/S beliefs on patients, thereby compromising patient autonomy.34,35 Balancing this potential danger should be a recognition that R/S can contribute to coping with serious illness, and that in failing to address this domain of QOL, physicians may be neglecting an important force for healing and wholeness. There is considerable evidence that patients and individuals in the community support the integration of R/S into medical practice.32,33,36-38 This is not to suggest that the role of physicians is to be spiritual counselors; clearly physicians must respect their professional boundaries. However, physicians can participate appropriately in the spiritual care of patients by recognizing spiritual needs and advocating for attention to R/S concerns as routine features of clinical care.39 Furthermore, for physicians to facilitate the delivery of spiritual care, practical barriers should be addressed, including inadequate training in evaluating spiritual needs.40 Patients who reported greater spiritual support from outside and within the medical system had better QOL even after removing the support and existential QOL domains and controlling for other predictors of QOL. As physical health wanes, spiritual health may increasingly play a central role in determining patient well-being. This hypothesis is supported by the findings of Steinhauser et al41 in an investigation of factors important at the end of life among a random, national sample of 340 patients with advanced illness. Of nine attributes ranked by patients (eg, presence of pain, dying at home), being at peace with God was second in importance, with pain control only marginally ranking higher. Spiritual support may help patients find their peace with God and hence maintain QOL by providing them with opportunities to express spiritual concerns and receive spiritual counsel. Rummans et al,42 in a randomized, controlled trial of a multidisciplinary intervention in advanced cancer patients that included a spiritual component, found prospectively that patients receiving the intervention had improved QOL in comparison with controls. In addition, Kristeller et al43 alternately assigned cancer patients to a short, semistructured exploration of spiritual concerns by their oncologist and prospectively found a statistically significant improvement in depressive symptoms, QOL, and in a sense of interpersonal caring from their oncologist. Higher levels of religiousness, in our study and those of others,6 were found to be associated with wanting all measures to extend life. Religious individuals may feel that because their illness is in divine hands, there is always hope for a miraculous intervention. In addition, religious individuals may place a value on life that supersedes potential harms of aggressive attempts to sustain life. Furthermore, Jenkins and Pargament9 have proposed, religiousness may assist in preserving meaning and connection to others in the face of illness, and this may uphold patients desires to continue living. Although we, like others,6 found that religiousness was inversely associated with having an advance directive in our univariate analysis, we believe that this relationship was confounded by its association with race/ethnicitya strong predictor in this sample for not having an advance directive. The additional finding that region (despite adjusting for factors such as race and religiousness) was associated with having a DNR order suggests that completion of these orders is partly a function of geographic differences in institutional practices. The potential role that R/S plays in influencing patient QOL and in shaping treatment preferences suggests that the spiritual history44 should become a routine part of clinical care among patients with advanced illness, especially in caring for African American and Hispanic patients. Additional practices that have the potential to improve patient well-being include training of nonpastoral medical staff to identify spiritual needs and to improve awareness of R/S resources. The increasing presence of medical school courses on R/S is evidence of progress in this regard.45 Improved integration of pastoral staff into the medical team also has the potential to improve management of the spiritual aspects of illness. Finally, improving connections between the medical system and outside religious communities may facilitate incorporation of spiritual supporters into patient care. Some first steps toward this integration include inquiring about patients spiritual supports and inviting their involvement in care. Direct communication between the medical team and spiritual supporters when desired by patients may also be beneficial at times. Limitations of this study include the potential influence of selection bias, particularly the possibility of differences in R/S between participants and nonparticipants. Nonwhites were more likely to participate and were more religious. However, increasing reported distress at the time of recruitment was associated with nonparticipation and, among participants, greater religiousness. Although there were age differences in participation, age was not related to religiousness in the sample. Furthermore, the reasons for nonparticipation suggest another potential source for selection bias; for example, nonparticipants may have been not interested in participating because they were not religious or spiritual. However, the Coping With Cancer study assessed R/S as one of many coping factors, reducing the likelihood that nonparticipation was because of a specific disinterest in R/S. In addition, it is unclear in the questions regarding spiritual support how many patients did not have spiritual needs, although prior studies suggest that most cancer patients express spiritual needs.11-13 Finally, the cross-sectional nature of this study limits the interpretation of the relationship between spiritual support and QOL to a hypothesis-generating association. Attention to R/S has been recognized as an important component of end-of-life care, as illustrated by the National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative Care guidelines.4 However, additional research is essential to their appropriate implementation. Methods for meeting patient spiritual needs should be explored, and the impact of such interventions should be assessed. In addition, the appropriate roles of various health care providers (eg, physicians, nurses) in managing spiritual needs should be clarified. Although incorporating R/S into care requires delicacy, attention to this dimension of health has the potential to enhance patient well-being at the end of life.
The authors indicated no potential conflicts of interest.
Conception and design: Tracy A. Balboni, Lauren C. Vanderwerker, John R. Peteet, Holly G. Prigerson Financial support: Holly G. Prigerson Administrative support: Holly G. Prigerson Provision of study materials or patients: John R. Peteet, Holly G. Prigerson Collection and assembly of data: Lauren C. Vanderwerker, John R. Peteet, Holly G. Prigerson Data analysis and interpretation: Tracy A. Balboni, Lauren C. Vanderwerker, Susan D. Block, M. Elizabeth Paulk, Holly G. Prigerson Manuscript writing: Tracy A. Balboni, Susan D. Block, M. Elizabeth Paulk, Christopher S. Lathan, John R. Peteet, Holly G. Prigerson Final approval of manuscript: Tracy A. Balboni, Lauren C. Vanderwerker, Susan D. Block, M. Elizabeth Paulk, Christopher S. Lathan, John R. Peteet, Holly G. Prigerson Other: Susan D. Block
Supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants No. MH63892 and CA106370. Authors disclosures of potential conflicts of interest and author contributions are found at the end of this article.
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Steinhauser KE, Christakis NA, Clipp EC, et al: Factors considered important at the end of life by patients, family, physicians, and other care providers. JAMA 284:2476-2482, 2000 42. Rummans TA, Clark MM, Sloan JA, et al: Impacting quality of life for patients with advanced cancer with a structured multidisciplinary intervention: A randomized controlled trial. J Clin Oncol 24:635-642, 2006 43. Kristeller JL, Rhodes M, Cripe LD, et al: Oncologist Assisted Spiritual Intervention Study (OASIS): Patient acceptability and initial evidence of effects. Int J Psychiatry Med 35:329-347, 2005[CrossRef][Medline] 44. Koenig HG: STUDENTJAMA: Taking a spiritual history. JAMA 291:2881, 2004 45. Fortin AH, Barnett KG: STUDENTJAMA: Medical school curricula in spirituality and medicine. JAMA 291:2883, 2004 Submitted June 30, 2006; accepted September 19, 2006. This article has been cited by other articles:
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Copyright © 2007 by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Online ISSN: 1527-7755. Print ISSN: 0732-183X
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