health news arrowHome >> Medical Ethics >> US Doctors Surprisingly Religious Thu, 04 Dec 2008 GMT 
health news
  NEWS YOU CAN TRUST

Search Health News 
Browser Preferences
 Add to Favorites

Main Menu
 Home
 - - - - - Hot Topics - - - - -
 Bird Flu
 Drug Safety
 Stem Cell Research
 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 Alternative Medicine
 Children's Health
 Diet & Nutrition
 Disabilities
 *Diseases & Conditions
 Drugs & Herbs
 Environmental Health
 Fitness & Exercise
 Genetic Research
 Health Insurance
 Medical Ethics
 Men's Health
 *Mental Illness
 Pain
 Parenting
 Public Health & Safety
 Senior Care
 *Sexual Health
 Women's Health
 World Health
 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 Web Links
 Contact Us: info@dailynewscentral.com

XML News Feeds


 

HEALTH NEWS

US Doctors Surprisingly Religious

PDF  Print  E-mail
 23 June, 2005  16:53 GMT

US doctors religious
Dr. J. Edward Hill, president of the American Medical Association, said religion and medicine are completely compatible, as long as doctors do not force their own beliefs on patients.
A survey examining religion in medicine found that most US doctors believe in God and an afterlife -- a surprising degree of spirituality in a science-based field, researchers say.

In the survey of 1,044 doctors nationwide, 76 percent said they believe in God, 59 percent said they believe in some sort of afterlife, and 55 percent said their religious beliefs influence how they practice medicine.

"We were surprised to find that physicians were as religious as they apparently are," said Dr. Farr Curlin, a researcher at the University of Chicago's MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics.

83 Percent of the General Population Believes in God

"There's certainly a deep-seated cultural idea that science and religion are at odds," and previous studies have suggested that fewer than half of scientists believe in God, Curlin said Wednesday.

A previous survey showed about 83 percent of the general population believes in God.

But while medicine is science-based, doctors differ from scientists who work primarily in a laboratory setting, and their direct contact with patients in life-and-death situations may explain the differing views, Curlin said.

The study is based on responses to questionnaires mailed in 2003. It is to appear in an upcoming issue of the Journal of General Internal Medicine and was released online to subscribers earlier this month.

Religions Among Physicians Are More Varied

Dr. J. Edward Hill, president of the American Medical Association, said religion and medicine are completely compatible, as long as doctors do not force their own beliefs on patients.

Belief in "a supreme being ... is vitally important to physicians' ability to take care of patients, particularly the end-of-life issues that we deal with so often," said Hill, a family physician from Tupelo, Miss.

Religions among physicians are more varied than among the general population, the survey found. While more than 80 percent of the US population is Protestant or Catholic, 60 percent of doctors said they were from either group.

Compared with the general population, more doctors were Jewish -- 14 percent vs. 2 percent; Hindu -- 5 percent vs. less than 1 percent; and Muslim -- almost 3 percent vs. less than 1 percent.




Related Articles
Texas Takes Child, Arrests Mom in Cancer Controversy (10 Jun 2005)
How to Fall in Love in Three Minutes or Less (14 Feb 2005)
Doubt Cast on Value of Prayer in Healing (16 Jul 2005)
Separated Indonesian Twins Have Good Prognosis (22 May 2005)
Power of Prayer to Heal Illness May Be Overrated (31 Mar 2006)
British Doctors Urge Halt to 'Brain Drain' (27 May 2005)
 
Sponsored Text Links
Hydroderm: Lose wrinkles with Hydroderm
SkinStore.com: Strivectin SD 6oz Best Price Offer
Hydroderm: Body Shape - Proven to be safe and effective - Free Trial!
SkinStore.com: StriVectin-SD
InsureMe.com: Click here to get a free health insurance quote.