Background: Limited research has been conducted on contemporary spiritual healing in European countries. The aim of this article is to report how German healers and their clients experienced and perceived the outcomes of spiritual healing and which explanations they use to describe the perceived effects. Methods: Semistructured interviews and participatory observation was used to collect data from spiritual healers and their clients. Analyses were based on the methodological concept of directed qualitative content analysis. Data was analyzed using MAXQDA software, discussed and reviewed by a multidisciplinary research team consisting of medical anthropologists, medical doctors and a religious studies scholar. Results: In total 15 healers and 16 clients participated in this study, 24 interviews with healers, 20 interviews with clients and 8 participatory observations were analyzed. Healers and clients reported outcomes as positively perceived body sensations, increased well-being, positive emotions and symptomatic relief of medical complaints. Clients often described changes in their self-concepts and adapted life values. Explanations for perceived effects included connecting with transcendent sources, construction of meaning, as a result of the client-healer relationship, and as empowerment to make changes. Because the interviewed clients were recruited by the healers, a selection bias towards positive healing experiences is possible. Conclusion: We hypothesize that concepts of meaning construction, resource activation and the utilization of the clients' expectations help to explain the data. Grounded in the emic perspective, we propose to use the following outcomes for further prospective studies: positive body sensations, changes of self-concepts and values, changes of medical symptoms and complaints. From the etic perspective, physical, emotional, social and spiritual wellbeing, sense of coherence, meaningfulness of life, empowerment, resource activation, change and symptom control should be further explored as potential outcomes.
The doctors’ clinical time collides with the increasing of the use of telecare technologies in our digital era, reducing the actual doctor-patient interaction and the potential to engage with therapeutic doctor-patient communication. In our qualitative study, we followed a collaborative German-Israeli project that trained medical students to use complementary and integrative medicine (CIM) methods in order to improve doctor-patient communication. Interviews with the participants and participatory observation revealed the ways the mentors taught CIM methods, the meaning of therapuitic doctor-patient communication and how the students learned and implemented these skills in different ways. Our findings show that students expand their communication channels and skills, notice their own somatic-sensory states, and engage with somatic knowledge in different interactions. Our findings correspond with, and signify the intercorporeal space of doctor-patient interaction in the way in which doctors’ and patients’ soma-sensual aspects are interact, influence each another, and enable therapeutic communication.
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