[HTML][HTML] Responding to the spiritual needs of palliative care patients: A randomized controlled trial to test the effectiveness of the Kibo therapeutic interview

A Soto-Rubio, M Perez-Marin, D Rudilla… - Frontiers in …, 2020 - frontiersin.org
A Soto-Rubio, M Perez-Marin, D Rudilla, L Galiana, A Oliver, M Fombuena, P Barreto
Frontiers in Psychology, 2020frontiersin.org
Context The WHO recognizes the need to attend to patients' spiritual needs as being
fundamental to comprehensive and high-quality end-of-life care. Spiritual needs must be
attended to since the resolution of biological and psychosocial issues is insufficient to
reduce patients' suffering. Associations have been found between spiritual needs and other
variables of importance for patients in palliative care. Despite the consensus that exists
regarding the importance of assessing and attending to spiritual needs, professionals …
Context
The WHO recognizes the need to attend to patients’ spiritual needs as being fundamental to comprehensive and high-quality end-of-life care. Spiritual needs must be attended to since the resolution of biological and psychosocial issues is insufficient to reduce patients’ suffering. Associations have been found between spiritual needs and other variables of importance for patients in palliative care. Despite the consensus that exists regarding the importance of assessing and attending to spiritual needs, professionals encounter many difficulties in attempting to do so.
Objectives
Our study aims to demonstrate the benefits that the Kibo therapeutic interview in palliative care patients can have for spirituality, demoralization, and resilience.
Methods
A parallel randomized controlled trial of two groups was undertaken. Information on 60 palliative care patients during pre- and post-intervention time points was gathered.
Results
ANOVAs showed a statistically significant effect of the intervention on the dimension of transpersonal spirituality. The ANCOVA for the effect of the intervention on resilience also pointed to its effectiveness. When the means of demoralization were examined, a higher decrease in the levels of demoralization for patients in the intervention group was observed, when compared to patients in the control group.
Conclusion
Our findings point to this interview as an effective means to attend to the spiritual needs of palliative patients, reducing demoralization and increasing resilience. Future research could focus on a broader sample and on the effects of this interview on family caregivers, mourners, and health care professionals.
Clinical Trial Registration Number
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/ Identifier NCT03995095.
Frontiers
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