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1.
J Gen Intern Med ; 38(5): 1167-1174, 2023 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36598636

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Discrimination negatively impacts physician career trajectories and well-being. OBJECTIVE: Quantify perceived religious discrimination among US Muslim physicians and compare trends over time. DESIGN/PARTICIPANTS/MAIN MEASURES: Two national surveys tabulated discrimination. The 2013 survey involved a mailed questionnaire to a random sample of 746 Islamic Medical Association of North America (IMANA) members, while the 2021 survey was administered online to subscribers of IMANA, American Muslim Health Professionals, and the US Muslim Physician network. Eligible participants had to be practicing US Muslim physicians, and English-proficient (the 2021 sample was further restricted to physicians in academic medicine). Questionnaires assessed experiences of religious discrimination and accommodation. KEY RESULTS: In 2013, the 255 participants had a mean age of 52 years, were mostly male (70%), Sunni (91%), South Asian (70%), and adult immigrants (65%). In 2021, the 264 participants had a mean age of 39.5 years, were mostly male (65%) and Sunni (75%). In contrast to 2013, the majority were born in the USA (59%; p<0.01), and respondents were more diverse with 33% South Asians, 22% Arabs, and 16% African Americans. Greater proportions of the 2021 sample reported facing religious discrimination frequently in their career (24 to 53%; p<0.01), experiencing job turnover (7 to 32%; p<0.01), and having patients refuse their care (9 to 33%; p<0.01). A higher proportion of South Asians, Arabs, and participants under the age of 40 reported discrimination and job turnover in 2021 when compared to 2013. Higher proportions of South Asians and Whites reported being passed over for professional advancement and having patients refuse their care in 2021 relative to 2013. CONCLUSIONS: Many American Muslim clinicians encounter religious discrimination at the workplace, and these experiences appear to be on the rise. Healthcare workforce diversity, inclusion, and equity programming should include a focus on accommodating the religious identities of physicians.


Assuntos
Islamismo , Médicos , Adulto , Humanos , Masculino , Estados Unidos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Feminino , Recursos Humanos , Local de Trabalho , Brancos
2.
J Emerg Med ; 63(5): 702-708, 2022 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36372592

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: More than 100,000 Americans with failing organs await transplantation, mostly from dead donors. Yet only a fraction of patients declared dead by neurological criteria (DNC) become organ donors. DISCUSSION: Emergency physicians (EPs) can improve solid organ donation in the following ways: providing perimortem critical care support to potential organ donors, promptly notifying organ procurement organizations (OPOs), asking neurocritical care specialists to evaluate selected emergency department patients for death based on established neurologic criteria, participating in research to advance these developments, implementing automatic OPO notification technologies, and educating the professional and lay communities about organ donation and transplantation, including exploration of opt-out (presumed consent) organ recovery policies. CONCLUSION: With future improvements in organ preservation and DNC assessment, EPs may become even more involved in the donation process. EPs should support and engage in efforts to promote organ donation and transplantation.


Assuntos
Médicos , Obtenção de Tecidos e Órgãos , Humanos , Estados Unidos , Morte Encefálica , Consentimento Livre e Esclarecido , Doadores de Tecidos
3.
Am J Transplant ; 21(3): 1227-1237, 2021 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32772460

RESUMO

Biomedical and religious knowledge affects organ donation attitudes among Muslims. We tested the effectiveness of mosque-based, religiously tailored, ethically balanced education on organ donation among Muslim Americans. Our randomized, controlled, crossover trial took place at 4 mosques randomized to an early arm where organ donation education preceded a control educational workshop or a late arm with the order reversed. Primary outcomes were changes in biomedical (Rotterdam Renal Replacement Knowledge Test living donation subscale, R3KT) and religious (Islamic Knowledge of Living Organ Donation, IK-LOD) living kidney donation knowledge. Statistical analysis employed a 2 (Treatment Arm) X 3 (Time of Assessment) mixed-method analysis of variance. Of 158 participants, 59 were in the early arm and 99 in the late arm. A between group t test comparison at Period 1 (Time 1 - Time 2), demonstrated that the early arm had a significantly higher mean IK-LOD (7.11 v 5.19, P < .05) and R3KT scores (7.65 v 4.90, P < .05) when compared to the late arm. Late arm participants also had significant increases in mean IK-LOD (5.19 v 7.16, P < .05) and R3KT scores (4.90 v. 6.81, P < .05) postintervention (Time 2-Time 3). Our novel program thus yielded significant kidney donation-related knowledge gains among Muslim Americans (NCT04443114 Clinicaltrials.gov).


Assuntos
Islamismo , Obtenção de Tecidos e Órgãos , Estudos Cross-Over , Educação em Saúde , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , Humanos , Inquéritos e Questionários , Estados Unidos
4.
Clin Transplant ; 34(12): e14111, 2020 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33063912

RESUMO

We tested the efficacy of religiously tailored and ethically balanced education upon living kidney organ donation intent among Muslim Americans. Pre-post changes in participant stage of change, preparedness, and likelihood judged efficacy. Among 137 participants, mean stage of change toward donation appeared to improve (0.59; SD ± 1.07, P < .0001), as did the group's preparedness to make a donation decision (0.55; SD ± 0.86, P < .0001), and likelihood to donate a kidney (0.39; SD ± 0.85, P < .0001). Mean change in likelihood to encourage a loved one, a co-worker, or a mosque community member with ESRD to seek a living donor also increased (0.22; SD ± 0.84, P = .0035, 0.23; SD ± 0.82, P = .0021, 0.33; SD ± 0.79, P < .0001 respectively). Multivariate ordered logistic regression models revealed that gains in biomedical knowledge regarding organ donation increased odds for positive change in preparedness (OR = 1.20; 95% CI 1.01-1.41, P = .03), while increasing age associated with lower odds of positive change in stage of change (OR = 0.98, 95% CI 0.96-0.998, P = .03), and prior registration as an organ donor lowered odds for an increase in likelihood to donate a kidney (OR = 0.22; 95% CI 0.08-0.60, P = .003). Our intervention appears to enhance living kidney donation-related intent among Muslim Americans [Clinicaltrials.gov number: NCT04443114].


Assuntos
Transplante de Órgãos , Obtenção de Tecidos e Órgãos , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , Humanos , Intenção , Islamismo , Inquéritos e Questionários
5.
Neurocrit Care ; 33(2): 347-357, 2020 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32556858

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: We sought to evaluate how Muslim allied healthcare professionals view death by neurologic criteria (DNC). METHODS: We recruited participants from two listservs of Muslim American health professionals to complete an online survey questionnaire. Survey items probed views on DNC and captured professional and religious characteristics. Comparative statistical analyses were performed after dichotomizing the sample based on religiosity, and Chi-squared, Fisher's exact tests, likelihood ratios and the Kruskal-Wallis test were used to assess differences between the two cohorts. RESULTS: There were 49 respondents (54%) in the less religious cohort and 42 (46%) in the more religious cohort. The majority of respondents (84%) believed that if the American Academy of Neurology guidelines are followed and a person is declared brain dead, they are truly dead; there was no difference on this view based on religiosity. Less than a quarter of respondents believed that outside of organ donation, mechanical ventilation, hydration, nutrition or medications should be continued after DNC; again, there was no difference based on religiosity of the sample. Importantly, half of all respondents believed families should be able to choose whether an evaluation for DNC is performed (40% of the less religious cohort and 60% of the more religious cohort, p = 0.09) and whether organ support is discontinued after DNC (49% of both cohorts, p = 1). CONCLUSIONS: Although the majority of allied Muslim healthcare professionals we surveyed believe DNC is death, half believe that families should be able to choose whether an evaluation for DNC is performed and whether organ support should be discontinued after DNC. This provides insight that can be helpful when making medical practice policy and addressing legal controversies surrounding DNC.


Assuntos
Transplante de Órgãos , Obtenção de Tecidos e Órgãos , Morte Encefálica , Atenção à Saúde , Humanos , Islamismo , Estados Unidos
6.
J Relig Health ; 59(2): 796-803, 2020 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29992473

RESUMO

Healthcare practitioners are increasingly aware that patients may utilize faith-based healing practices in place of conventional medicine based on their spiritual and/or religious understandings of health and illness. Therefore, elucidating the ontological understandings of patients utilizing such religion-based treatments may clarify why patients and clinicians have differing understandings of 'who' heals and 'what' are means for healing. This paper describes an Islamic ontological schema that includes the following realms: Divine existence; spirits/celestial beings; non-physical forms/similitudes; and physical bodies. Ontological schema-based means of healing include conventional medicine, religion-based means (e.g., supplication, charity, prescribed incantations/amulets), and active adoption of Islamic virtues (e.g., reliance on God [tawakkul] and patience [sabr]). An ontological schema-based description of causes and means of healing can service a more holistic model of healthcare by integrating the overlapping worlds of religion and medicine and can support clinicians seeking to further understand and assess patient responses and attitudes toward illness and healing.


Assuntos
Cura pela Fé , Islamismo , Religião e Medicina , Humanos , Virtudes
7.
Perspect Biol Med ; 62(2): 273-300, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31281122

RESUMO

Recent events, including the arrest of physicians in Michigan, have renewed bioethical debates surrounding the practice of female genital cutting (FGC). The secular discourse remains divided between zero-tolerance activists and harm-reduction strategists, while Islamic bioethical debates on FGC similarly comprise two camps. "Traditionalists" find normative grounds for a minor genital procedure in statements from the Prophet Muhammad and in classical law manuals. "Reformers" seek to decouple FGC from Islam by reexamining its ethico-legal status in light of the deficiencies within narrations ascribed to the Prophet, the health risks posed by FGC, and contemporary perspectives on human rights, and thereby delegitimize the practice. This paper argues that alignment between secular and Islamic views can be found in a harm-reduction strategy by demonstrating that the impetus to reduce harms is found within Prophetic statements on FGC. From an Islamic ethico-legal standpoint, it is justified to acknowledge the permitted status of FGC procedures that do not harm-in other words, the ritual nick-and at the same time the prohibited status of procedures that lead to credible medical and psychological harms. Bringing these multiple perspectives and data points into conversation forges a common ground to delegitimize and eradicate harmful genital procedures among Muslim communities.


Assuntos
Circuncisão Feminina/ética , Circuncisão Feminina/métodos , Islamismo , África , Circuncisão Feminina/estatística & dados numéricos , Feminino , Humanos , Consentimento Livre e Esclarecido , Médicos/ética , Opinião Pública , Abstinência Sexual , Organização Mundial da Saúde
9.
J Relig Health ; 58(2): 408-425, 2019 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30465264

RESUMO

This paper reports on the multi-phase development of an English-language modesty measure for use among Muslim populations. The process yielded a 10-item measure that has high levels of internal consistency reliability (Cronbach's α of 0.83), and has acceptable discriminant and predictive validity. Specifically although our modesty measure for Muslim women was found to be significantly correlated with measures of positive and negative religious (Islamic) coping, it was not significantly correlated with religious practice-based religiosity (discriminant validity). Further logistic modeling revealed higher modesty levels positively associated with forgoing mammography because of concerns about lack of same-sex providers (predictive validity).


Assuntos
Islamismo , Mamografia , Adaptação Psicológica , Feminino , Humanos , Idioma , Psicometria , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Autoimagem , Inquéritos e Questionários
10.
Lancet ; 389(10071): 871-880, 2017 02 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27814964

RESUMO

Breast and cervical cancer are major threats to the health of women globally, particularly in low-income and middle-income countries. Radical progress to close the global cancer divide for women requires not only evidence-based policy making, but also broad multisectoral collaboration that capitalises on recent progress in the associated domains of women's health and innovative public health approaches to cancer care and control. Such multisectoral collaboration can serve to build health systems for cancer, and more broadly for primary care, surgery, and pathology. This Series paper explores the global health and public policy landscapes that intersect with women's health and global cancer control, with new approaches to bringing policy to action. Cancer is a major global social and political priority, and women's cancers are not only a tractable socioeconomic policy target in themselves, but also an important Trojan horse to drive improved cancer control and care.


Assuntos
Países em Desenvolvimento , Saúde da Mulher , Feminino , Saúde Global , Humanos , Formulação de Políticas , Política Pública , Fatores Socioeconômicos , Direitos da Mulher
11.
Xenotransplantation ; 25(3): 1-12, 2018 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29913041

RESUMO

Donation after circulatory determination of death (DCDD) and xenotransplantation are advanced as possible solutions to the growing gap between the number of individuals in need of organ transplantation and the pool of donors. Investigating how various publics, including religious leaders, might view these "therapies" is essential for broad public and professional support and will be needed in order to make these solutions viable. This study, therefore, presents normative Islamic bioethical perspectives on donation after circulatory determination of death and xenotransplantation. First, we will discuss foundational Islamic ethico-legal debates regarding organ donation. These debates can be grouped into three broad positions, those who consider organ donation categorically impermissible as a violation of human dignity (hurma and karama), those who agree that organ donation is impermissible in principle, but allow it conditionally on the basis of dire necessity (darura), and those who permit organ donation based on notions of public interest (maslaha). Next, we will reflect upon the additional ethical dimensions DCDD and xenotransplantation add to these debates. We contend that the condition of minimal harm to the donor and the definition of death need to be accounted for within Islamic perspectives on DCDD. Xenotransplantation, on the other hand, highlights concerns about using pigs for therapeutic purposes. We conclude by commenting on additional questions that remain to be addressed in the Islamic bioethical debate over these practices and with recommendations for further research.


Assuntos
Xenoenxertos/imunologia , Islamismo , Doadores de Tecidos/ética , Obtenção de Tecidos e Órgãos , Transplante Heterólogo , Animais , Humanos , Suínos
12.
Xenotransplantation ; 25(3): e12400, 2018 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29687920

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: This paper is based on a theological symposium presented at the International Xenotransplantation Association's 14th Congress held in Baltimore, MD, September, 2017. METHODS: The information explores the Jewish, Christian and Muslim theological perceptions and perspectives about cross-species (ie pig-to-human) organ transplantation, the genetic alterations required in the organ-source pig, and their potential to influence individual acceptance of the procedure. RESULTS/CONCLUSIONS: This work should not be considered as the ultimate word about individual theological views, but rather as part of an ongoing conversation that will hopefully lead to wider consideration and exploration of these issues as xenotransplantation science advances towards clinical trials.


Assuntos
Cristianismo , Xenoenxertos , Islamismo , Judaísmo , Transplante Heterólogo , Animais , Humanos , Suínos , Teologia , Transplante Heterólogo/métodos
13.
Women Health ; 58(3): 334-346, 2018 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28278014

RESUMO

Mosques could serve as a promising setting for health interventions. However, little empirical data are available to guide the development of mosque-based health interventions, especially for women. We aimed to assess Muslim women's views on effective strategies for mosque-based educational interventions to promote women's health. A sample of Muslim women of diverse ethnicity and race was recruited from mosques in Chicago to participate in semi-structured interviews. In interviews, nineteen participants (aged 41-67 years) discussed characteristics of the imam and peer educator, aspects of the intervention modality, and content of health messaging that would be effective in mosque-based health programs. Participants reported that imams should have health-related knowledge to deliver to be successful, while peer educators should be respected women, educated in both religion and health. Sermons and group education classes were believed to be modalities that could reach a large portion of the community for discussions of women's health issues. Participants also suggested that sermons should use scriptural sources to convey the importance of women's health. Participants supported imam-led sermons and peer-led educational classes as effective strategies to promote women's health. Our study results speak to strategies for leveraging religious concepts to promote health among Muslim women.


Assuntos
Educação em Saúde , Promoção da Saúde/métodos , Islamismo , Saúde da Mulher , Adulto , Idoso , Chicago , Feminino , Promoção da Saúde/organização & administração , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Pesquisa Qualitativa
14.
J Sex Med ; 14(8): 1003-1010, 2017 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28760245

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Hymenoplasty, commonly called "revirginization," is a controversial procedure that pushes the scope of medical practice to satisfy cultural and/or religious "needs." AIM: To outline the sociocultural contexts underlying patient requests for hymenoplasty and present Islamic juridical views on the moral status of hymenoplasty for Muslim patients. METHODS: Narrative review of the extant bioethics literature and leading Islamic ethico-legal verdicts. OUTCOMES: We identified "Western" and Islamic bioethical debates on hymenoplasty and the critical concepts that underpin ethical justifications for and against the procedure. RESULTS: From a Western-ethics perspective, the life-saving potential of the procedure is weighed against the role of the surgeon in directly assisting in a deception and in indirectly promoting cultural practices of sexual inequality. From an Islamic bioethical vantage point, jurists offer two opinions. The first is that the surgery is always impermissible. The second is that although the surgery is generally impermissible, it can become licit when the risks of not having postcoital bleeding harm are sufficiently great. CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Patient requests for hymenoplasty should be approached by surgeons with a willingness to understand patients' social contexts and reasons for pursuing the procedure and are ethically justified by leading Islamic jurists in particular circumstances. STRENGTHS AND LIMITATIONS: This article presents emic and etic perspectives on hymenoplasty in Muslim patients, although our review of the Islamic bioethical stances might have missed some juridical opinions and important considerations. Further, Muslims, even devout ones, might not be beholden to Islamic juridical views on medical procedures and thus physicians should not make assumptions about the rationale for, and ethical views of, patients seeking hymenoplasty. CONCLUSION: This article provides critical insight into how Muslim patients, and Islamic jurists, evaluate the moral contexts of hymenoplasty. Bawany MH, Padela AI. Hymenoplasty and Muslim Patients: Islamic Ethico-Legal Perspectives. J Sex Med 2017;14:1003-1010.


Assuntos
Procedimentos Cirúrgicos em Ginecologia/ética , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos em Ginecologia/legislação & jurisprudência , Islamismo/psicologia , Pacientes/psicologia , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos em Ginecologia/psicologia , Humanos , Pacientes/legislação & jurisprudência , Médicos/ética , Religião e Medicina , Fatores Socioeconômicos
15.
Dev World Bioeth ; 17(3): 205-214, 2017 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28039957

RESUMO

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization's (UNESCO) Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights asserts that governments are morally obliged to promote health and to provide access to quality healthcare, essential medicines and adequate nutrition and water to all members of society. According to UNESCO, this obligation is grounded in a moral commitment to promoting fundamental human rights and emerges from the principle of social responsibility. Yet in an era of ethical pluralism and contentions over the universality of human rights conventions, the extent to which the UNESCO Declaration can motivate behaviors and policies rests, at least in part, upon accepting the moral arguments it makes. In this essay I reflect on a state's moral obligation to provide healthcare from the perspective of Islamic moral theology and law. I examine how Islamic ethico-legal conceptual analogues for human rights and communal responsibility, huquq al-'ibad and fard al-kifayah and other related constructs might be used to advance a moral argument for healthcare provision by the state. Moving from theory to application, I next illustrate how notions of human rights and social responsibility were used by Muslim stakeholders to buttress moral arguments to support American healthcare reform. In this way, the paper advance discourses on a universal bioethics and common morality by bringing into view the concordances and discordances between Islamic ethico-legal constructs and moral arguments advanced by transnational health policy advocates. It also provides insight into applied Islamic bioethics by demonstrating how Islamic ethico-legal values might inform the discursive outputs of Muslim organizations.


Assuntos
Bioética , Atenção à Saúde/ética , Acessibilidade aos Serviços de Saúde/ética , Islamismo , Religião e Medicina , Responsabilidade Social , Nações Unidas , Direitos Humanos , Humanos , Saúde Pública , Nações Unidas/ética
16.
Med Health Care Philos ; 20(4): 545-559, 2017 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27613411

RESUMO

The ever-increasing technological advances of modern medicine have increased physicians' capacity to carry out a wide array of clinical interventions near the end-of-life. These new procedures have resulted in new "types" of living where a patient's cognitive functions are severely diminished although many physiological functions remain active. In this biomedical context, patients, surrogate decision-makers, and clinicians all struggle with decisions about what clinical interventions to pursue and when therapeutic intent should be replaced with palliative goals of care. For some patients and clinicians, religious teachings about the duty to seek medical care and the care of the dying offer ethical guidance when faced with such choices. Accordingly, this paper argues that traditional Sunni Islamic ethico-legal views on the obligation to seek medical care and Islamic theological concepts of human dignity (karamah) and inviolability (hurmah) provide the ethical grounds for non-intervention at the end-of-life and can help calibrate goals of care discussions for Muslim patients. In closing the paper highlights the pressing need to develop a holistic ethics of healthcare of the dying from an Islamic perspective that brings together multiple genres of the Islamic intellectual tradition so that it can meet the needs of the patients, clinicians and Muslim religious leaders interacting with the healthcare system.


Assuntos
Ética Clínica , Islamismo , Princípios Morais , Assistência Terminal/ética , Tomada de Decisões , Análise Ética , Humanos , Pessoalidade
17.
J Relig Health ; 56(4): 1478-1488, 2017 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28343283

RESUMO

Trust in physicians and the healthcare system underlies some disparities noted among minority populations, yet a descriptive typology of different types of trust informing healthcare decisions among minority populations is limited. Using data from 13 focus groups with 102 American Muslims, we identified the types and influence of trust in healthcare decision-making. Participants conveyed four types of trust implicating their health-seeking behaviors-(I) trust in allopathic medicine, (II) trust in God, (III) trust in personal relationships, and (IV) trust in self. Healthcare disparity research can benefit from assessing how these types of trust are associated with health outcomes among minority populations so as to inform intervention programs that seek to enhance trust as a means to improve community health.


Assuntos
Tomada de Decisão Clínica/métodos , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , Disparidades em Assistência à Saúde/estatística & dados numéricos , Islamismo/psicologia , Religião e Medicina , Confiança/psicologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , Feminino , Grupos Focais , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Estados Unidos , Adulto Jovem
18.
Psychooncology ; 25(10): 1175-1182, 2016 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27424488

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Studies suggest that American Muslim women underutilize mammography. While religion has a strong influence upon Muslim health behaviors, scant research has examined how religion-related beliefs inform Muslim women's intention for mammography. Our study identifies and examines such beliefs. METHODS: Muslim women aged 40 years and older sampled from mosques participated in focus groups and individual interviews. Drawing upon the theory of planned behavior, interviews elicited salient behavioral, normative, and control beliefs regarding mammography and the influence of Islam upon screening intention. RESULTS: Fifty women participated in 6 focus groups and 19 in semistructured interviews, with near-equal numbers of African American, South Asian, and Arab Muslims. Forty-two percent of participants had not had a mammogram within the past 2 years. Across differences in race/ethnicity and mammography status, women voiced four religion-related salient beliefs that inform mammography intention: (1) the perceived duty to care for one's health, (2) religious practices as methods of disease prevention, (3) fatalistic notions about health, and (4) comfort with gender concordant health care. CONCLUSIONS: Religious beliefs influence decisions to pursue mammography across the ethnic/racial diversity of Muslim women. Notions about duty to God and the stewardship of one's body appear to enhance mammography intention. Theocentric notions of cure and illness and varied views regarding personal agency also inform decisional frames that impact mammography intention. Given the salience of religion among our participants, religiously tailored messages in interventions have the potential to enhance cancer screening.


Assuntos
Árabes/psicologia , Neoplasias da Mama/diagnóstico , Comportamentos Relacionados com a Saúde/etnologia , Intenção , Islamismo , Mamografia/estatística & dados numéricos , Aceitação pelo Paciente de Cuidados de Saúde , Negro ou Afro-Americano/psicologia , Idoso , Asiático/psicologia , Neoplasias da Mama/etnologia , Neoplasias da Mama/psicologia , Atenção à Saúde , Detecção Precoce de Câncer , Feminino , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Religião e Medicina , Estados Unidos
20.
J Relig Health ; 55(2): 403-21, 2016 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26613589

RESUMO

Physician religiosity can influence their ethical attitude toward medical procedures and can thereby impact healthcare delivery. Using a national survey of American Muslim physicians, we explored the association between physician recommendation of three controversial medical procedures--tubal ligation, abortion, and porcine-based vaccine--and their (1) religiosity, (2) utilization of bioethics resources, and (3) perception of whether the procedure was a medical necessity and if the scenario represented a life threat. Generally, multivariate models found that physicians who read the Qur'an more often as well as those who perceived medical necessity and/or life threat had a higher odds recommending the procedures, whereas those who sought Islamic bioethical guidance from Islamic jurists (or juridical councils) more often had a lower odds. These associations suggest that the bioethical framework of Muslim physicians is influenced by their reading of scripture, and the opinions of Islamic jurists and that these influences may, paradoxically, be interpreted to be in opposition over some medical procedures.


Assuntos
Bioética , Pesquisas sobre Atenção à Saúde/estatística & dados numéricos , Islamismo , Médicos/ética , Religião e Medicina , Adulto , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Estados Unidos , Adulto Jovem
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