An increasing number of
scientific articles
include spirituality and
religiosity as factors
that generate wellbeing
and help us recover from
certain illnesses.
Spirituality is part of
the curriculum of many
universities in Brazil
and abroad. But how can
that we include
spirituality as part of
the routine of treatment
by healthcare
professionals,
especially when many in
Brazil are poorly paid
and have a reduced time
for consultations.
In the following
interview, Dr Lawrence
Garcia (photo) an
orthopaedic surgeon and
president of the Medical
Spiritist Association of
the city of Uberlândia
(in Minas Gerais state),
tell us about his
experience setting up a
spiritual support group
to work with patients.
In which way is the
treatment carried out at
the support groups from
the traditional
treatment at the
doctor’s practice?
One thing is to come
into contact with the
information and realise
how important it is to
mention spirituality and
religiosity to your
patients and the other
is to put it into
practice daily in your
profession. Not everyone
does that.
And why does that
happen?
There are many reasons.
There’s the lack of
time, with the routine
you get used to, running
up and down. You have to
deal with the demands
and complaints of
patients and end up not
asking him or her about
their religious beliefs
or if religiosity plays
any par in the illness
they are suffering from.
As well as the lack of
time and the problem
with cost and pay, which
account for a shorter
consultation time with
patients, you have the
lack of knowledge from
many and even the lack
of will to deal with
spiritual matters. What
we need to understand is
that, whatever the
reason or justification,
we will be incurring in
negligence.
Is it easier to deal
with spirituality in the
support groups?
Yes, it is a lot easier
and transdisciplinary.
That is the great
advantage of the support
groups because it has a
much more focused
approach during the
consultation. I am
treating the patient,
but I understand that I
can’t provide all the
treatment he or she
needs. The support group
provide for the
patient’s other needs.
That is very clear in
preventative care and in
mental health. We have a
multidisciplinary team
that meets on Tuesday
and include a
psychologist and
psychiatrists and other
specialists, who discuss
the cases. We have a
review every six months.
And when we look back
and see the progress we
get really amazed. How
did you manage to deal
with so many issues and
so many important
aspects with the
patient’s participation?
We wouldn’t have had
time to do it in the
doctor’s practice.
Is it difficult to
create groups like that?
It may seem difficult
initially. But it is a
lot easier than you
imagine. There are many
well qualified
professionals who are
interested in getting
involved in that line of
work, in spiritual
debates. They are just
waiting for an
opportunity. The first
thing we need is to be
willing to spend the
time to form the group.
Eventually you will need
more dedication. I
remember that our group
began with a doctor, a
yoga instructor and we
set down to watch talks
by Spiritist speakers.
Do you have material
available online to help
people interested in
setting up those support
groups?
Yes, the material is
there, available. The
great advantage of
starting up a group like
that now is that all the
training process is
ready and available. We
didn’t start by giving a
lecture or talk to
patients. We used to sit
down with the patients
and watch Spiritist
talks on YouTube. At the
end, we would ask
questions and open a
debate. It is very good
to study spirituality
with your patient. We
learned a lot. We are
now at a different
stage, no longer in the
backyard of a private
house watching videos,
but inside hospitals and
working with the
approval of hospital
directors. The group now
prepares the talk
according to the needs
of patients. The process
of starting and
developing a group is
now much more enjoyable.
I strongly recommend
that those who haven’t
yet started to develop
support therapeutic
groups in their clinics
to take a chance and do
it. It is important too
that this is done
outside Spiritist
Centres, where a great
number of patients would
be excluded. When you
build inter-religious
dialogue without
speaking specifically
about religion, but
working on spirituality,
you add value, get
people together and
grow.
Translation:
Leonardo Rocha - l.rocha1989@gmail.com