journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36433796/when-and-why-patients-and-families-reject-chaplains-challenges-strategies-and-solutions
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert Klitzman, Gabrielle Di Sapia Natarelli, Elizaveta Garbuzova, Stephanie Sinnappan, Jay Al-Hashimi
Hospital chaplains perform important activities, but critical questions arise about the challenges they may face in working with patients, and how these professionals respond. Thirty-three telephone interviews of approximately 1 hour and were conducted with 21 board-certified chaplains. When asked about their biggest challenges and most rewarding interactions, several chaplains described rejections by patients or families. Patients and families at times rejected chaplains, and did so for six broad types of reasons - not wanting to discuss the disease due to conflicted feelings, including anger or frustration at the patient, the cosmos or God; or wanting to minimize it; wanting a chaplain of their own faith; or of a particular gender or other characteristic; being atheist or wary of religion; or misunderstanding what chaplains do...
November 26, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36288092/increasing-chaplain-support-for-veterans-at-high-risk-for-suicide-through-targeted-outreach-a-quality-improvement-initiative
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Melissa A Smigelsky, Justin L Maynard, C Graham Ford, Ryan Parker, Jennifer H Wortmann, Keith G Meador, Anna Fink, Jason A Nieuwsma
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has prioritized improving the identification of veterans at risk for suicide and ensuring adequate staffing of personnel to assist veterans in need. It is imperative that suicide prevention efforts make use of the full range of available resources, including diverse professionals with distinctive skillsets. Chaplains are engaged in suicide prevention efforts in VA, but the literature lacks examples of chaplain-involved suicide prevention efforts that clearly describe how chaplains are engaged, the training and/or qualifications chaplains possess in the area of suicide prevention, and the reach and impact of such efforts...
October 26, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36264014/the-perceived-impact-of-being-a-chaplain-researcher-on-professional-practice
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Niels den Toom, Anja Visser, Jacques Körver, Martin N Walton
As research has become part of chaplaincy, many chaplains become involved in research, often in the double-role of chaplain-researcher. Despite the increase of involvement in research, how conducting research benefits chaplains' professional care for clients has not been studied. The present study aimed to describe how chaplains perceive the impact of participation in the Dutch Case Studies Project (CSP) on their professional expertise and positioning in the institution. A survey was distributed among participants of the CSP (N = 50) and was completed by 48 participants...
October 20, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34923924/inpatient-pediatric-chaplain-service-utilization-among-children-with-chronic-non-cancer-diseases
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hannah Case, Tyler Benning, Zachary Lovig, Jeramy Girard, Megan Thorvilson, Philip R Fischer, Jason Homme
Despite the broad importance of pediatric spiritual care, most research focuses on oncologic and palliative care contexts. We aim to describe the utilization of pediatric chaplain services by children hospitalized for non-cancer chronic illnesses and to identify factors that predict utilization of chaplain services. Among 629 patients with 915 admissions, we found chaplain services were utilized in 5.0% of admissions. Utilization was similar between religiously affiliated patients (7.5%, 95%CI [5.3-10.6%]) and un-affiliated patients (6...
October 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36102782/chaplain-staffing-and-scope-of-service-benchmarking-spiritual-care-departments
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexander Tartaglia, Tyler Corson, Kelsey B White, Ann Charlescraft, Elizabeth Jackson-Jordan, Tricia Johnson, George Fitchett
The functions of hospital chaplains and the corresponding staffing of spiritual care departments remain persistent and parallel questions within the profession. No consensus exists on services provided by spiritual care departments nor the staffing patterns to meet those expectations. This study describes the key activities and staffing at the 20  U.S. News and World Report Best Hospitals 2020-2021 as well as the connections between services, staffing, and select hospital characteristics such as average daily census...
September 14, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35904441/chaplains-as-mediators-in-conflicts-concerning-method-of-patients-medical-care-study-of-the-situation-in-poland
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Waldemar Głusiec, Magdalena Suchodolska
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Health Care Chaplains, whose primary role is to provide spiritual care to patients, their families, and medical staff, are sometimes asked for help in making difficult decisions and resolving conflicts. Their help is justified especially when religious beliefs and values constitute the root of the problem. The study aims to analyze the phenomenon of asking hospital and hospice chaplains in Poland to take on the role of mediators in conflicts concerning methods of patients' medical care...
July 29, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35853097/interprofessional-communication-training-to-address-spiritual-aspects-of-cancer-care
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Betty R Ferrell, Haley Buller, Judith A Paice, Myra Glajchen, Trace Haythorn
Effective communication is essential for palliative care clinicians to provide quality spiritual care to cancer patients. Despite attention to spiritual needs having the potential to positively impact a patient's quality of life, clinicians continue to report a lack of confidence in addressing a patient's spiritual distress. This article addresses the development of a 3-day train-the-trainer communication cancer education program (ICC: Interprofessional Communication Curriculum) organized by the 8 domains of the National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative Care...
July 19, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35820050/improving-quality-in-pastoral-care-using-the-pastoral-care-activity-tracker-pcat-a-feasibility-study-of-a-digital-tool-within-an-australian-healthcare-organization
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Steve Calder, Matthew Andreotta, Thomas Morris, Mustafa Atee
BACKGROUND: Activity reporting of Pastoral Care Coordinators (PCCs) is often inadequate within care settings because of suboptimal analog data collection methods. This study aims to render pastoral care activity reporting more efficient through digitizing data collection in pastoral care settings. METHODS: A one-year feasibility (pilot) study of a digital tool, the "Pastoral Care Activity Tracker" (PCAT) was conducted between June 1, 2020 and May 31, 2021 at HammondCare, an Australian nonprofit healthcare organization...
July 12, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35820036/american-health-care-chaplains-narrative-experiences-serving-during-the-covid-19-pandemic-a-phenomenological-hermeneutical-study
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cate Michelle Desjardins, Beth L Muehlhausen, Paul Galchutt, Beba Shensi Tata-Mbeng, George Fitchett
The COVID-19 pandemic significantly impacted North American health care chaplains' modes of work and emotions. To capture the experiences of health care chaplains across the United States, 30 Board Certified (or eligible) chaplains were asked to keep a weekly narrative journal of their experiences and emotions during the pandemic from April of 2020 through June of 2020. Twenty-one chaplains submitted their journals for qualitative analysis, amounting to over 90,000 words of chaplain reflection containing rich, descriptive, and often personal stories of health care chaplains...
July 12, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35788182/what-is-the-role-of-spiritual-care-specialists-in-teaching-generalist-spiritual-care-the-perspectives-of-pastoral-care-staff-in-a-large-catholic-health-and-aged-care-organisation
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kate Fiona Jones, Jennifer Washington, Matthew Kearney, Megan C Best
The value of spiritual care training for all staff working in health and aged care has been demonstrated. This study investigated how spiritual care specialists (SCSs) perceive their role in delivering spiritual care education to other staff. Fourteen SCSs participated in three online focus groups. Two key themes were identified: First, SCSs build upon existing capacity of staff by: (i) recognising existing strengths and capabilities; (ii) using relevant stories; (iii) using language which makes spiritual care accessible; (iv) making training relevant and practical; (v) tapping into staff vocation or calling; and (vi) building awareness of one's own spirituality...
July 5, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35776733/spiritual-support-of-transgender-individuals-a-literature-review
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Seth A Sonneville
Spiritual support has been a staple of healthcare before hospitals in western civilizations were established by communities of faith. Research has demonstrated that wellbeing is associated with balanced care for the body, mind, and spirit. Healthcare disparities are being identified as disproportionally impacting transgender and gender nonconforming (TGNC) individuals. The root cause of this disparity is being studied as are medical and wellbeing interventions, including the benefit of spiritual support. This author's objective was two-fold...
July 1, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34396929/implementing-quality-improvement-efforts-in-spiritual-care-outcomes-from-the-interprofessional-spiritual-care-education-curriculum
#32
REVIEW
Christina Puchalski, Betty R Ferrell, Tami Borneman, Christy DiFrances Remein, Trace Haythorn, Carolyn Jacobs
The Interprofessional Spiritual Care Curriculum (ISPEC) was created to train interdisciplinary health care teams to recognize and address the spiritual needs of seriously or chronically ill patients. The curriculum, in a train-the-trainer format, employs didactic presentations, discussions, lab sessions, skill demonstrations, and video clips. In course applications, participants were required to submit goals to achieve and demonstrate institutional support. For the first ISPEC course, in July 2018, 48 clinician-chaplain teams attended...
July 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33882787/patients-and-loved-ones-expectations-of-chaplain-services
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Beth L Muehlhausen, Todd Foster, Aaron H Smith, George Fitchett
A study assessing the expectations patients and loved ones have of hospital chaplains was conducted at Ascension St. Vincent Indiana hospitals. In-person interviews were conducted with 452 patients and loved ones during an inpatient stay. The survey instrument was a modified version of a survey developed by Dr. Katherine Piderman of the Mayo Clinic. Participants answered questions regarding demographics, awareness of availability, expectations of visits, reasons for wanting to see a chaplain and gave feedback regarding visits if they had seen a chaplain...
July 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35757912/chaplain-reported-plans-for-end-of-life-care-conversations-role-clarity-for-the-spiritual-care-specialists
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica Russell, Karly R Quaack, Jade Nunez
The present study examined chaplain reported plans for patient conversations regarding end-of-life (EOL) care through the lens of multiple goals. Chaplains ( n  = 69) were asked to curate a plan for engaging with a patient about EOL treatment options, including how they would engage in the conversation and what they would plan to discuss. Findings indicated that plans primarily consisted of relational and identity goals, with a majority navigating multiple goal orientations. Content overwhelmingly involved developing rapport with patients, eliciting patient preferences for care, and serving as a patient liaison...
June 26, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35722773/goals-of-chaplaincy-care-a-scoping-review-of-dutch-literature
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anja Visser, Annelieke Damen, Carmen Schuhmann
A substantial number of (mostly health care) chaplaincy articles have emphasized the need for chaplaincy outcome research. In this study, we contribute to formulating intrinsic chaplaincy outcomes by first identifying chaplaincy goals. To this end, we have performed a scoping review of Dutch chaplaincy literature. We have focused on articles, books, and dissertations published between 2014 and 2019. Six distinct goals of chaplaincy were identified, using 86 fragments found in 33 sources: worldview vitality and plausibility, processing life events, deepening spirituality, relational affirmation, well-being, and exercising freedom of religion...
June 19, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35695021/chaplains-work-in-primary-care
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Austyn Snowden, Iain Telfer, Anne Vandenhoeck, Joost Verhoef, Alan Gibbon
Health is holistic, but health services are often not. Primary care is the first point of contact for patients in the UK, and at least two in every three present with complex bio-psycho-socio-economic issues. In Scotland, the Community Chaplaincy Listening (CCL) service was created to see if chaplains could help. CCL involves specially trained chaplains listening to patients referred to them by general practitioners (GP) for spiritual support. Between 2018 and 2019, 143 people used CCL and completed baseline and post-discharge outcome measures...
June 11, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35446754/preferences-for-healthcare-chaplaincy-services-among-u-s-adults-differences-by-inpatient-and-outpatient-settings
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Geila Rajaee, Minal R Patel
We examined preferences around spiritual support services delivered by chaplains among U.S. adults in outpatient and inpatient healthcare settings using a cross-sectional national survey of U.S. adults ( n  = 1,020). For outpatient settings, 5% reported interest in chaplain services, whereas 16% reported interest in inpatient settings. In both settings, a higher perceived value of chaplain services ( p  < 01) and previous experience with a chaplain ( p < .01) were associated with a greater interest in a chaplain consult when adjusting for demographic factors...
April 21, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33909539/ethics-education-in-clinical-pastoral-education-prevalence-and-types
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David W Fleenor, Paul Cummins, Jo Hirschmann, Vansh Sharma
Chaplains frequently serve on ethics committees, as ethics consultants, and as Institutional Review Board (IRB) members in hospitals. However, little is known about how Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE) residents are trained in ethics and whether this training is appropriate or adequate for chaplains' subsequent work in health care settings. We created a survey to canvas 222 CPE residency programs in the United States accredited by the ACPE: The Standard for Spiritual Care (ACPE) to inquire about the prevalence of ethics curricula within residency programs, the educational structure of ethics curricula, and challenges associated with teaching ethics within CPE...
April 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33070700/the-social-significance-of-chaplains-evidence-from-a-national-survey
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wendy Cadge, Taylor Paige Winfield, Michael Skaggs
How often do people have contact with chaplains? How valuable do they find that contact? We answer these questions with data from a 2019 NORC AmeriSpeaks survey. Twenty-one percent of respondents had contact with a chaplain in the past two-years, 57% in a healthcare setting. The majority find that contact moderately or very valuable. Christians were more likely than non-Christians and respondents with no religion to have contact with chaplains. People of color who were not Christians or had no religion were more likely than their white counterparts to have contact with a chaplain...
April 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35316149/preface
#40
REVIEW
Keith Meador
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 22, 2022: Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
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