This study aimed to explore the contribution religion/spirituality makes in the process of helpingrnpatients in clinical social service. Utilizing a mix of online and paper survey research, thisrnrandom sample study of clinical service providers explored participants’ attitude/perception as arnmeasure of their consent or disagreement towards including these two concepts in practice andrntheir practical use of religious/spiritually integrated interventions. The responses obtained fromrn67 practitioners to RRSP Likert-type scale Index of 14 interventions mostly showed indifferencernon the utilization of religious/spiritually integrated interventions. However, practitioners thatrnwere involved in religious establishments agreed more to the integration of religion/spirituality inrnpractice, utilizing it in 75% of their cases as opposed to those working in secular institutions.rnData collected through surveys generated results from practitioners of governmental and nongovernmentalrninstitutions that are mainly engaged in three clinical fields; mental health,rnHIV/AIDS and child care. Results indicate that professionals in the field of child care agreed tornuse these concepts more than those in the field of mental health and HIV/AIDS. Practitioners'rnprofessional attitude toward the role of religion and spirituality in clinical social service wasrnfound to be the most important predictor of intervention in this sample. The study includes arnreview of existing literature related to religious/spirituality in health care.rnFuture researches should explore the actual need for religious/spiritual integrated practice inrnAddis Ababa and the effective use of evidence-based spiritually integrated interventions asrnalternative ways of coping with health problems, especially in palliative care.rnKey words:rnReligious/Spiritually integrated interventions, mental health, HIV/AIDS, child care, clinicalrnsocial work