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1.
J Relig Health ; 63(3): 1985-2010, 2024 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38240943

The present non-randomized clinical trial examined the short-term outcomes of one-on-one chaplaincy interventions with 416 geriatric patients in Belgium. Participants were interviewed one or two days before a potential chaplaincy intervention (baseline measurement), and one or two days after a potential intervention (post-measurement). Patients in the non-randomized intervention group received an intervention by the chaplain, while the non-randomized comparison group did not. Patients in the intervention group showed a significant decrease in state anxiety and negative affect, and a significant improvement in levels of hope, positive affect, peace, and Scottish PROM-scores, compared to the comparison group. Levels of meaning in life and faith did not significantly change after the chaplaincy intervention. This study suggests that geriatric patients may benefit from chaplaincy care and recommends the integration of chaplaincy care into the care for older adults.


Catholicism , Pastoral Care , Humans , Belgium , Aged , Male , Female , Pastoral Care/methods , Aged, 80 and over , Chaplaincy Service, Hospital/methods , Middle Aged
2.
J Relig Health ; 63(1): 289-308, 2024 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38252390

A module to explore perspectives on chaplaincy services was included in an online enterprise survey randomly distributed to members of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) during 2021. Up to eight questions were answered by 2783 active military personnel relating to their perception of chaplain activities and the impact of chaplaincy services. Of those military participants answering the question on religious status (n = 1116), a total of 71.6% (n = 799) of respondents identified as non-religious while 28.4% (n = 317) identified as holding a religious affiliation. Approximately 44.2% (n = 1230) of participants had sought support from a chaplain, of which 85.3% (n = 1049) found chaplaincy care to be satisfactory or very satisfactory. While the data suggest there is a lack of clarity around the multiple roles undertaken by chaplaincy, nevertheless respondents were just as likely to prefer chaplains for personal support (24.0%), as they were to seek help from non-chaplaincy personnel such as a non-ADF counsellor (23.2%), their workplace supervisor (23.1%) or a psychologist (21.8%). This evidence affirms that the spiritual care provided by military chaplaincy remains one of several preferred choices and thus a valued part of the holistic care provided by the ADF to support the health and wellbeing of its members.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Military Personnel , Pastoral Care , Spiritual Therapies , Humans , Cross-Sectional Studies , Australia , Spirituality , Clergy
3.
J Health Care Chaplain ; 30(2): 89-106, 2024.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36705599

Empathy has been highlighted as a key concept in chaplaincy care, but its meaning has hardly been explored in depth within this field. This study aims to help develop stronger conceptual clarity by investigating humanist chaplains' conceptualizations of empathy. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with twenty humanist chaplains working in health care, military, and prisons. A qualitative design was employed to clarify which components and features constitute empathy in humanist chaplaincy care. Empathy emerges as a multidimensional concept that is "fundamentally human." Chaplains distinguish between true and pseudo empathy based on different features including authenticity and concern. This article provides a conceptual model that combines the different components and features of empathy in humanist chaplaincy care and the relationship between them in light of empathy's humanizing quality. It may be used for educational purposes and could function as a conceptual framework for future research efforts.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , Clergy , Empathy , Concept Formation , Qualitative Research
4.
J Health Care Chaplain ; 30(2): 107-121, 2024.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37163214

Western society is increasingly a spiritual society, but not so much a society that draws on clearly delineated religious or worldview pillars anymore. Within healthcare, there's a growing attention to the spiritual dimension of health and the collaborative spiritual care that is needed for person-centered care. This changing religious/worldview and healthcare landscape is influencing healthcare chaplaincy. In this case study in-depth interviews were conducted with a chaplaincy team within a large healthcare organization in The Netherlands. Dialogical Self Theory was used as the theoretical framework in the narrative analysis of these stories. This provided insights into how these chaplains negotiate their professional identity within a changing healthcare landscape. It is concluded that there are multiple and often contradictory and conflicting positions within and between chaplains and that it is a challenge for healthcare chaplains to integrate the "old" and "new" representations of chaplaincy.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , Clergy , Delivery of Health Care , Health Facilities , Netherlands , Pastoral Care/methods
5.
J Health Care Chaplain ; 30(2): 137-151, 2024.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37486766

How does the American public understand the term chaplain? What fraction interact with chaplains and in what settings? What is the content of those interactions and do care recipients find them valuable? We answer these questions with data from a nationally representative survey (N = 1096) conducted in March 2022 and interviews with a subset (N = 50) of survey recipients who interacted with chaplains. We find that people in the United States do not have a consistent understanding of the term chaplain. Based on our definition, at least 18% of Americans have interacted with a chaplain. Among those who interacted with a chaplain as defined in the survey, the majority did so through healthcare organizations. Care recipients include people who were ill and their visitors/caregivers. The most common types of support received were prayer, listening and comfort. Overall, survey respondents found chaplains to be moderately or very valuable.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , United States , Clergy , Spirituality , Religion
6.
J Pastoral Care Counsel ; 77(3-4): 137-147, 2023 Sep.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38061335

Critical questions arise about how contextual factors affect hospital chaplains. We interviewed 23 chaplains in-depth. Hospitals' religious or other institutional affiliation, geography, and leadership can influence chaplains both explicitly/directly and implicitly/indirectly-for example, in types/amounts of support chaplains receive, scope of chaplains' roles/activities, amounts/types of chaplains' interactions, chaplains' views of their roles and freedom to innovate, and patients', families' and other providers' perceptions/expectations regarding spiritual care. These data have critical implications for research, practice, and education.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , Clergy , Spirituality , Patients , Qualitative Research
7.
J Pastoral Care Counsel ; 77(3-4): 177-180, 2023 Sep.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37946462

What is the meaning of sacrament? How can a professional Orthodox Christian lay chaplain participate in sacramental ministry without the grace given by ordination? This piece on Christina Hanegraaff's first year as a Clinical Pastoral Education resident explores this question through reflecting on her experiences of entering into people's suffering and carrying their cross alongside them-a modern-day Simon of Cyrene.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , Female , Clergy/education , Pastoral Care/education
8.
J Relig Health ; 62(6): 4032-4071, 2023 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37891396

This paper describes the development and initial chaplaincy user evaluation of 'Pastoral Narrative Disclosure' (PND) as a rehabilitation strategy developed for chaplains to address moral injury among veterans. PND is an empirically informed and integrated intervention comprising eight stages of pastoral counselling, guidance and education that was developed by combining two previously existing therapeutic techniques, namely Litz et al's (2017) 'Adaptive Disclosure' and 'Confessional Practice' (Joob & Kettunen, 2013). The development and results of PND can be categorized into five phases. Phase 1: PND Strategy Formation-based upon extensive international research demonstrating that MI is a complex bio-psycho-social-spiritual syndrome with symptoms sufficiently distinct from post-traumatic stress disorder. The review also provided evidence of the importance of chaplains being involved in moral injury rehabilitation. Phase II: Development and Implementation of 'Moral Injury Skills Training' (MIST)-which involved the majority of available Australian Defence Force (ADF) Chaplains (n = 242/255: 94.9%) completing a basic 'Introduction to Moral Injury' (MIST-1) as well as an 'Introduction to PND' (MIST-2). Phase III: MIST-3-PND-Pilot evaluation-involved a representative chaplaincy cohort (n = 13) undergoing the PND eight-stage strategy to ensure the integrity and quality of PND from a chaplaincy perspective prior to wider implementation. The pilot PND evaluation indicated a favourable satisfaction rating (n = 11/13: 84.6%; M = 4.73/5.0 satisfaction). Phase IV: MIST-3-PND Implementation-involved a larger cohort of ADF Chaplaincy participants (n = 210) completing a revised and finalized PND strategy which was regarded favourably by the majority of ADF Chaplains (n = 201/210: 95.7%; M = 4.73/5.0 satisfaction). Phase V: Summation. In conclusion the positive satisfaction ratings by a significant number of ADF chaplaincy personnel completing MIST-3-PND, provided evidence that chaplains evaluated PND as a suitable counselling, guidance and education strategy, which affirmed its utilisation and justifies further research for using PND to address MI among veterans, that may also prove valuable for other chaplains working in community health and first responder contexts.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic , Veterans , Humans , Australia , Morals , Narration , Pastoral Care/methods , Clergy , Spirituality
9.
J Health Care Chaplain ; 29(3): 245-255, 2023.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37166788

From the gallows and fields of war to the street and bedside, chaplains of color have been present and instrumental in providing spiritual and emotional support in public and private settings across the United States. Their histories and experiences are not well documented and integrated into the field of spiritual care and chaplaincy, a field often understood as predominantly White, male, and Christian. This article introduces this special issue by offering historical context-particularly for Black chaplains-and naming the key themes that weave through the articles included. Naming the experiences of chaplains of color is a central step in responding to historically grounded racial inequities in the work of chaplaincy and spiritual care in the United States.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , Male , United States , Clergy/psychology , Spirituality , Christianity
10.
J Health Care Chaplain ; 29(3): 279-291, 2023.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37229592

This article shifts the traditional approach to case studies in healthcare chaplaincy from questions about what chaplains do to questions of who chaplains are and how they experience the work. We draw insights from womanist theology to offer three narratives written by African American healthcare chaplains that illustrate themes of intersectionality, the effects interview contexts have on training and work, and key questions that emerge while doing the work. These narratives honor the largely invisible work of African-American chaplains while raising central hypotheses for research and intervention we outline in conclusion.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Clergy , Pastoral Care , Female , Humans , Black People , Clergy/psychology , Delivery of Health Care , Health Facilities , Pastoral Care/education
11.
J Relig Health ; 62(3): 1491-1512, 2023 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36976458

This article considers the contribution of faith-based chaplains who provide holistic pastoral and spiritual care within critical environments such as the military, first responders, and hospitals. The contribution of faith-based chaplains can sometimes be taken for granted or not properly understood, particularly in some Western countries which are currently experiencing a decline in religiosity. Following on from a previous paper regarding chaplaincy utilization (Layson et al. 2022), this article presents an alternative argument to the secularist-humanist perspective by noting five ways by which the faith based chaplaincy model provides best practice service and builds a capability advantage for organizations that engage faith-based chaplaincy services. The first section discusses faith-based chaplaincy and organizational holistic care; the second section considers the role of faith-based chaplains-much of which is largely unknown and poorly appreciated; the third section considers the unique capability of faith-based chaplains to provide spiritual and religious care to those of faith and for those of none; the fourth section explores how faith-based chaplains can leverage the positive impact of religious organizations to provide additional low-cost resources for other organizations and their staff; and lastly, the operational advantage of faith-based chaplains on the world stage is considered, particularly in light of culturally and linguistically diverse populations to whom religiosity is increasingly important.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , Australia , Spirituality , Clergy
12.
J Pain Symptom Manage ; 65(6): e745-e755, 2023 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36813056

CONTEXT: This statement fills a significant gap in the efforts to demonstrate outcomes of the chaplaincy role in health care and to provide direction for quality measurement related to spiritual care as a key domain of serious illness care. OBJECTIVES: The objective of this project was to develop the first major consensus statement on the role and qualifications of health care chaplains in the Unites States. METHODS: The statement was developed by a diverse panel of highly regarded professional chaplains and nonchaplain stakeholders. RESULTS: The document provides guidance to chaplains and other spiritual care stakeholders as they further integrate spiritual care in health care and conduct research and quality improvement efforts to strengthen the evidence base for practice. The consensus statement is in Fig. 1 and available at https://www.spiritualcareassociation.org/role-of-the-chaplain-guidance.html. CONCLUSION: This statement can potentially drive the standardization and alignment of all phases of health care chaplaincy preparation and practice.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Clergy , Humans , Delivery of Health Care , Spirituality , Quality Improvement
13.
J Relig Health ; 62(3): 1513-1531, 2023 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36749461

One in four American patients now identify as religiously unaffiliated. This study utilizes thematic analysis to deliver qualitative results from in-depth interviews conducted with five chaplains at a premier cancer research institution in Florida to envision what care for their spiritual dimension should look like in practice. It demonstrates why the chaplains interviewed suggested that spiritual caregiving still contributes to their holistic wellbeing, and it suggests how spiritual care and assessments may be provided to so-called religious 'nones'-or those who identify as spiritual but not religious, not religiously affiliated, secular humanist, atheist, agnostic, and so on. We conclude with a novel spirituality assessment for use while serving this patient population.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , Religion , Spirituality , Clergy , Florida , Pastoral Care/methods
14.
J Relig Health ; 62(3): 1473-1490, 2023 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36738395

The aim of this study was to explore Australian chaplains' views of spirituality. Semi-structured online interviews were conducted with 16 participants. Participants relied heavily on metaphors and analogies to describe spirituality. Four inter-related themes were identified through reflexive thematic analysis: (1) The core of spirituality: spirituality as a source of meaning or belief which leads to connectedness with something greater than oneself; (2) A function of spirituality: spirituality empowers people to cope in a crisis, by providing motivation, hope and comfort; (3) The experience of spiritual crisis: admission to hospital or residential care can lead to existential struggle; and (4) The spiritual practice: of holding space between struggle and growth. Greater understanding of the theoretical basis of their work may allow chaplains to offer more in the therapeutic space.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Spiritual Therapies , Humans , Aged , Spirituality , Australia , Clergy
15.
J Relig Health ; 62(1): 1-7, 2023 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36658414

This first issue of JORH for 2023 considers (1) the ministry of chaplains, (2) Judaism, (3) the people of war-torn Ukraine, (4) the ongoing saga of COVID-19 and, on a happier note, (5) we celebrate a belated jubilee by presenting a bibliometric analysis of the Journal of Religion and Health (1961-2021). To conclude this issue, a book review is presented, "The Desperate Hours" by award winning journalist Marie Brenner, focusing on one hospital's fight to save New York City during COVID-19. A reminder is also provided to readers on the call for papers regarding a future issue on religion, spirituality, suicide and its prevention.


COVID-19 , Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Humans , Judaism , Ukraine , COVID-19/prevention & control , Religion , Spirituality
16.
J Pastoral Care Counsel ; 77(2): 92-100, 2023 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36597657

These data, the first to explore chaplains' challenges in ending visits/relationships with patients/families, has critical implications for practice, education, and research. Questions arise about the scope/boundaries of chaplains' relationships with patients/families. Interviews were conducted with 23 chaplains who face questions/challenges regarding how to end visits and interactions, including individual conversations and ongoing relationships with patients/families. Chaplains confront uncertainties and rely on verbal- and non-verbal cues to gauge how long to stay with each patient/family, and they are sometimes unsure. These data have critical implications for practice, education, and research.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , Clergy , Patients' Rooms , Hospitals
17.
J Relig Health ; 62(1): 117-129, 2023 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36622580

Healthcare in Aotearoa New Zealand is currently undergoing major reform. A document review of spiritual care policies of (former) District Health Boards (DHBs) obtained via the Official Information Act 1982 was undertaken in August 2022. Dalglish, Khalid and McMahon's (2020) READ process was used for analysis. Eight of twenty DHBs reported that they had no spiritual care policy. While there is commonality in terms of pastoral interventions provided, there is variation in how chaplains are expected to practice. Spiritual care policy needs to be refreshed and standardised to allow chaplains to better meet the diverse needs of patients receiving care in Aotearoa New Zealand hospitals.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , Clergy , Delivery of Health Care , Health Policy , Spirituality
18.
J Relig Health ; 62(1): 130-146, 2023 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36418754

The paper reports the results of an exploratory online survey among German, Austrian, and Swiss hospital chaplains (n = 158, response rate 17%) to identify the ethical conflicts they encounter in their work. Respondents indicated that questions surrounding end-of-life care are predominant among the conflicts faced. Chaplains get involved with these conflicts most often through the patients themselves or through nursing staff. Most encounters occur during pastoral care visits rather than in structured forms of ethics consultation such as clinical ethics committees. The results add to the ongoing discussion of chaplains as agents in ethics consultation within healthcare systems as well as their specific role and contribution.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , Austria , Switzerland , Protestantism , Clergy , Pastoral Care/methods , Surveys and Questionnaires , Delivery of Health Care , Germany
19.
J Relig Health ; 62(1): 39-54, 2023 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36566479

It is critical to understand the characteristics of patients who receive spiritual care through chaplain visits. This study evaluated 2373 records from chaplain visits provided to 1315 patients over a three-month period (March-May 2021) at a large suburban teaching hospital, Midwest, USA. Approximately 70% of patients received one chaplain visit. However, data revealed that when patients were admitted emergently, or received visits for reasons related to self-harm or suicidality, the frequency of chaplain visits significantly increased. This study suggests a need for spiritual care services for patients with emergency or mental health conditions. Furthermore, it highlights the need for further training and resources for chaplains to increase clinical competencies in providing specialized spiritual care support to specific patient populations.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Pastoral Care , Humans , Clergy/psychology , Retrospective Studies , Hospitalization , Hospitals, Teaching
20.
J Relig Health ; 62(1): 65-82, 2023 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36583768

This overview of the current literature of spirituality and health and the role of professional chaplains specifically considers intensive care unit survivorship, instead of the more common focus on end-of-life circumstances or family support on an ICU. The purpose is to enhance clinicians' understanding and use of spiritual resources for patient care and outcomes. It is a product of comprehensive daily monitoring of the Medline database from 2002 to 2022 for all publications indexed by the terms "spiritual," "religion," and "chaplain." A case will be used throughout, to illustrate spirituality dynamics. Also, a practical strategy, developed by the authors from clinical experience, will be outlined for clinicians' spiritual support of patients, requiring little time or specialized knowledge and avoiding the blurring of professional roles and boundaries, while potentially yielding clinical benefits suggested in the medical literature.


Chaplaincy Service, Hospital , Spiritual Therapies , Humans , Spirituality , Survivorship , Intensive Care Units , Religion , Clergy
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