Clergy Religious Beliefs and ICU Utilization at the End of Life
Michael Balboni, Ph.D., Instructor, Harvard Medical School
High religious community spiritual support is associated with greater aggressive interventions at the end of life (EOL). At EOL, half of U.S. patients are visited by clergy. The relationship of clergy religious beliefs about EOL care to dying congregants’ EOL medical decisions is unknown.
This is an NCI-funded study of 1665 U.S. clergy randomly-selected from a comprehensive database of 368,408 U.S. congregations and administered a survey 8/2014-2/2015; 1005 responded (60%). Clergy reported endorsement of religious beliefs about congregants’ EOL care (RBEC), including miracles, sanctity of life, divine sovereignty, and redemptive suffering. Clergy reported on their last experience in spiritual caregiving to a dying congregant, including congregant’s care location in the final week. The primary outcome was any ICU care in the final week of life. Multivariable analyses (MVA), controlling for clergy age, gender, race, region, and congregational income, assessed the relationship of clergy RBEC to any congregant ICU care in the last week.
Most (86%) clergy affirmed belief in a miraculous cure; 54% agreed that the congregant should accept every medical treatment out of religious obligations. A minority of clergy affirmed that belief in divine sovereignty relieved congregants of future medical decisions (28%) and that they should endure medical procedures because suffering is God’s test (27%). In MVA, higher RBEC scores were associated with a greater likelihood of any ICU utilization in the last week (AOR=1.28, p=.02), with belief in divine sovereignty being the strongest predictor (AOR 2.1, p=.005). Predictors of having greater RBEC scores included being Hispanic (AOR=3.35, p<.001) or black (aor=3.0, p<.001), as compared to white, and being pentecostal (aor=3.54, p<.001) or evangelical (aor=2.12, p<.001) as compared to clergy self-identified as liberal.
A majority of clergy endorse religious beliefs regarding their dying congregants’ eol medical care; these beliefs are associated with greater icu care in the final days of life for congregants. future research is needed to determine religiously-consistent approaches to clergy eol education to mitigate aggressive interventions at the eol.
High religious community spiritual support is associated with greater aggressive interventions at the end of life (EOL). At EOL, half of U.S. patients are visited by clergy. The relationship of clergy religious beliefs about EOL care to dying congregants’ EOL medical decisions is unknown.
This is an NCI-funded study of 1665 U.S. clergy randomly-selected from a comprehensive database of 368,408 U.S. congregations and administered a survey 8/2014-2/2015; 1005 responded (60%). Clergy reported endorsement of religious beliefs about congregants’ EOL care (RBEC), including miracles, sanctity of life, divine sovereignty, and redemptive suffering. Clergy reported on their last experience in spiritual caregiving to a dying congregant, including congregant’s care location in the final week. The primary outcome was any ICU care in the final week of life. Multivariable analyses (MVA), controlling for clergy age, gender, race, region, and congregational income, assessed the relationship of clergy RBEC to any congregant ICU care in the last week.
Most (86%) clergy affirmed belief in a miraculous cure; 54% agreed that the congregant should accept every medical treatment out of religious obligations. A minority of clergy affirmed that belief in divine sovereignty relieved congregants of future medical decisions (28%) and that they should endure medical procedures because suffering is God’s test (27%). In MVA, higher RBEC scores were associated with a greater likelihood of any ICU utilization in the last week (AOR=1.28, p=.02), with belief in divine sovereignty being the strongest predictor (AOR 2.1, p=.005). Predictors of having greater RBEC scores included being Hispanic (AOR=3.35, p<.001) or black (aor=3.0, p<.001), as compared to white, and being pentecostal (aor=3.54, p<.001) or evangelical (aor=2.12, p<.001) as compared to clergy self-identified as liberal.
A majority of clergy endorse religious beliefs regarding their dying congregants’ eol medical care; these beliefs are associated with greater icu care in the final days of life for congregants. future research is needed to determine religiously-consistent approaches to clergy eol education to mitigate aggressive interventions at the eol.