Spirituality: The Forgotten Link in Occupational Therapy Practice
May 25, 2023
4 min. read
We are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We are spiritual beings having a human experience. - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
If spirituality is integral to the body-mind-spirit connection and client-centered care, why is this topic often neglected among occupational therapists? As several studies demonstrate, spirituality and religion (S/R) play a significant role in individuals understanding of their suffering, adapting, and interpreting their illness and disability through a spiritual perspective. Finding hope, peace, comfort, resilience, support, acceptance, and connection alleviates suffering.1-2 Additionally, S/R can promote healthy lifestyle choices, coping strategies, enhanced quality of life, and well-being.3-4
Spirituality, expressed through meaningful occupations, inherently falls within the domain of all occupational therapy practice. The American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) considers spirituality a significant client factor, and the Canadian Model of Occupational Performance and Engagement (CMOP-E) views spirituality as the core motivational force within a client.5-6
What Is Spirituality?
The AOTA defines spirituality as a deep experience of meaning brought about by engaging in occupations that involve the enacting of personal values and beliefs, reflection, and intention; within a supportive contextual environment.5
Many people find spirituality through religion or a personal relationship with the divine. Others may find it connected to nature, music, the arts, meditation, yoga, chanting, social action, and volunteering.
Are Religion and Spirituality the Same?
While religion and spirituality are often used interchangeably, they are not synonymous. Spirituality is broader, encompassing the search for meaning, purpose, and connection. In contrast, religion is a specific set of organized beliefs, symbols, rituals, and practices, usually shared by a community or group.
People may identify as a combination of religious and spiritual, but being religious does not automatically make one spiritual or vice versa. Other individuals do not identify as either religious or spiritual. However, Thompson and colleagues stress, when religious observance is not given equal consideration like any other facet of the client, the overall scope of therapy may be limited from its holistic potential. Even when clients do not specifically mention religious observance as a priority, it does not negate the need to raise questions about the importance this topic may have for individuals.7
Discomfort, Lack of Preparedness, and Fear Impede Implementation in OT Practice
The topic of spirituality is often uncomfortable for some occupational therapists and provokes a sense of vulnerability in their clients and themselves.8 This discomfort contributes to the reluctance of occupational therapists to engage their clients on this topic. Occupational therapists also report fear of offending their clients, projecting their own beliefs, lack of time, and uncertainty about reimbursement.9 As a result, occupational therapists usually wait until clients initiate discussions surrounding their spiritual needs. Moreover, academic programs that do not address the importance of spirituality leave practitioners ill prepared.10
Spiritual History Assessments
Before initiating a spiritual assessment, Anandarajah & Hight state that practitioners need to understand their own spiritual beliefs, values, and biases to remain patient-centered and non-judgmental when addressing the spiritual concerns of patients, primarily when the beliefs differ.11 However, when practitioners have firmly held values, they risk imposing their views; therefore, it might be necessary to refrain from conducting an assessment. Obtaining consent is essential before initiating a spiritual assessment.
The FICA assessment involves questions about clients faith, the importance of their beliefs, membership in a spiritual community, and if there are spiritual practices they wish to develop.12 The FICA examines four concepts:
F: Faith, Belief, Meaning
I: Importance and Influence
C: Community
A: Address/Action in Care
The HOPE assessment involves five questions addressing core aspects of spirituality. This assessment can facilitate a meaningful discussion with diverse populations whose spirituality does not affect traditional religious practice. It also allows those for whom religion, God, or prayer are significant to volunteer this information. The five questions include:
H: Sources of hope, meaning, comfort, strength, peace, love, and connection
O: Organized religions importance in the clients life
P: Personal spirituality and practices that are helpful
E: Effect of medical care and end-of-life issuesThis question involves possible conflicts about S/R beliefs and medical care/decisions, the impact of illness on spiritual participation, and access to S/R resources (chaplain or community spiritual leader).
Although spirituality and religion are often ambiguous and create discomfort in occupational therapy practice, they play a vital role in health promotion, prevention, recovery, and adaptation to illness and disability. Spirituality and religion provide resources for coping, finding meaning and purpose in suffering, quality of life, and well-being. As the occupational therapy profession embraces holistic and client-centered care, implementing S/R is essential in improving our clients lives and demonstrating our distinct value.
Below, watch Gail Sims discuss common barriers to exploring spirituality in healthcare in this brief clip from her MedBridge course, “Assessment of Spiritual Needs in Rehabilitation Nursing."