%0 Journal Article %T Validation and test-retest reliability of the Royal Free Interview for Spiritual and Religious Beliefs when adapted to a Greek population %A Despina Sapountzi-Krepia %A Vasilios Raftopoulos %A Marcos Sgantzos %A Evangelia Kotrotsiou %A Zoe Roupa-Darivaki %A Kalliope Sotiropoulou %A Ioanna Ntourou %A Alexandra Dimitriadou %J Annals of General Psychiatry %D 2005 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1744-859x-4-6 %X A total of 209 persons (77 men and 132 women) with a mean age of 28.33 ¡À 9.44 years participated in the study (test group). We subsequently approached 139 participants of the test group with a mean age of 28.93 ¡À 9.60 years, who were asked to complete the Royal Free Questionnaire a second time two weeks later (retest group).The vast majority of participants (58.9%) reported both a religious and a spiritual belief, compared to 52 (25.1%) who told of a religious belief only. The internal consistency of the spiritual scale for the test group proved to be good, as standardized inter-item reliability / Cronbach's alpha was 0.83. Item-total correlations ranged from 0.51 to 0.73. They indicated very good levels of differentiation, thus showing that the questions were appropriate. Internal consistency of the spiritual scale for the retest group proved as good as for the test group. Standardized inter-item reliability / Cronbach's alpha was 0.84. Item-total correlations ranged from 0.52 to 0.75. The Pearson correlation coefficient for the total test-retest score of the spiritual scale was 0.754 (p < 0.001).The Greek version of the Royal Free Interview for Religious and Spiritual Beliefs is reliable and thus suitable for use in Greece.Religious faith, spirituality and spiritual beliefs were rarely discussed in the psychological or medical literature of the '80s [1,2]. However, over the past decade an increasing interest on the part of health care professionals in spirituality and spiritual care emerged, and related articles were frequently published in medical and nursing journals [3-8]. Religious faith and spirituality are now widely recognized as important components of subjective human wellness [9], of health care outcomes [10-14], of holistic nursing care [15,16] and of the quality of hospital care [17-19].Nevertheless, the terms spirituality and religiousness have been used in different ways by different authors, sometimes interchangeably because of the elusiveness of bo %U http://www.annals-general-psychiatry.com/content/4/1/6