Spirituality As A Determinant Of Health: Emerging Policies, Practices, And Systems
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
6-1-2024
Journal
Health affairs (Project Hope)
Volume
43
Issue
6
DOI
10.1377/hlthaff.2023.01643
Abstract
Reimagining public health's future should include explicitly considering spirituality as a social determinant of health that is linked to human goods and is deeply valued by people and their communities. Spirituality includes a sense of ultimate meaning, purpose, transcendence, and connectedness. With that end in mind, we assessed how recommendations recently issued by an expert panel for integrating spiritual factors into public health and medicine are being adopted in current practice in the United States. These recommendations emerged from a systematic review of empirical evidence on spirituality, serious illness, and population health published between 2000 and 2022. For each recommendation, we reviewed current federal, state, and local policies and practices recognizing spiritual factors, and we considered the ways in which they reflected the panel's recommendations. In this article, we highlight opportunities for broader application and scale while also noting the potential harms and benefits associated with incorporating these recommendations in various contexts. This analysis, while respecting the spiritual and religious diversity of the US population, identifies promising approaches for strengthening US public health by integrating spiritual considerations to inform person- and community-centered policy and practice.
APA Citation
Long, Katelyn N.; Symons, Xavier; VanderWeele, Tyler J.; Balboni, Tracy A.; Rosmarin, David H.; Puchalski, Christina; Cutts, Teresa; Gunderson, Gary R.; Idler, Ellen; Oman, Doug; Balboni, Michael J.; Tuach, Laura S.; and Koh, Howard K., "Spirituality As A Determinant Of Health: Emerging Policies, Practices, And Systems" (2024). GW Authored Works. Paper 5177.
https://hsrc.himmelfarb.gwu.edu/gwhpubs/5177
Department
Medicine