Pastoral care in hospitals
Tumori. 2011 Sep-Oct;97(5):666-71. .
Pastoral care in hospitals: a literature review.
Source
Pastoral Care Unit, IRCCS Foundation National Cancer Institute of Milan, Italy. tullio.proserpio@istitutotumori.mi.it
Abstract
AIMS AND BACKGROUND:
This literature review investigates the potential contribution of the pastoral care provided in hospitals by hospital chaplains, as part of an integrated view of patient care, particularly in institutions dealing with severe disease.
METHODS AND STUDY DESIGN:
A search was conducted in the Medline database covering the last 10 years.
RESULTS:
Ninety-eight
articles were considered concerning the modern hospital chaplains'
relationships and the principal procedures and practices associated with
their roles, i.e., their relations with the scientific world, with
other religious figures in the community, with other faiths and
religious confessions, with other public health professionals and
operators, with colleagues in professional associations and training
activities, and with the hospital organization as a whole, as well as
their patient assessment activities and the spiritual-religious support
they provide, also for the patients' families.
CONCLUSIONS:
Improvements are needed on several fronts to professionalize the pastoral care
provided in hospitals and modernize the figure of the hospital
chaplain. These improvements include better relations between modern
chaplains and the hospital organization and scientific world; more focus
on a scientific approach to their activities and on evaluating the
efficacy of pastoral care
activities; greater clarity in the definition of the goals, methods and
procedures; the design of protocols and a stance on important ethical
issues; respect for the various faiths, different cultures and both
religious and nonreligious or secularized customs; greater involvement
in the multidisciplinary patient care
teams, of which the hospital chaplains are an integral part; stronger
integration with public health operators and cooperation with the
psychosocial professions; specific training on pastoral care and professional certification of chaplains; and the development of shared ethical codes for the profession.
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