Training Community Clergy in Serious Illness: Balancing Faith and Medicine

被引:0
作者
Sarah E. Koss
Ross Weissman
Vinca Chow
Patrick T. Smith
Bethany Slack
Vitaliy Voytenko
Tracy A. Balboni
Michael J. Balboni
机构
[1] Harvard Divinity School,Department of Anesthesiology
[2] Dana-Farber Cancer Institute,Department of Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care
[3] Harvard Graduate School of Education,undefined
[4] Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center,undefined
[5] Harvard Medical School Center for Bioethics,undefined
[6] Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary,undefined
[7] Emmanuel Gospel Center,undefined
[8] Wheaton College,undefined
[9] Dana-Farber Cancer Institute,undefined
[10] Initiative on Health Religion and Spirituality within Harvard,undefined
来源
Journal of Religion and Health | 2018年 / 57卷
关键词
Palliative care; End of life care; Clergy; Spirituality; Religion; Clergy education; Spiritual care;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Community-based clergy are highly engaged in helping seriously ill patients address spiritual concerns at the end of life (EOL). While they desire EOL training, no data exist in guiding how to conceptualize a clergy-training program. The objective of this study was used to identify best practices in an EOL training program for community clergy. As part of the National Clergy Project on End-of-Life Care, the project conducted key informant interviews and focus groups with active clergy in five US states (California, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York, and Texas). A diverse purposive sample of 35 active clergy representing pre-identified racial, educational, theological, and denominational categories hypothesized to be associated with more intensive utilization of medical care at the EOL. We assessed suggested curriculum structure and content for clergy EOL training through interviews and focus groups for the purpose of qualitative analysis. Thematic analysis identified key themes around curriculum structure, curriculum content, and issues of tension. Curriculum structure included ideas for targeting clergy as well as lay congregational leaders and found that clergy were open to combining resources from both religious and health-based institutions. Curriculum content included clergy desires for educational topics such as increasing their medical literacy and reviewing pastoral counseling approaches. Finally, clergy identified challenging barriers to EOL training needing to be openly discussed, including difficulties in collaborating with medical teams, surrounding issues of trust, the role of miracles, and caution of prognostication. Future EOL training is desired and needed for community-based clergy. In partnering together, religious–medical training programs should consider curricula sensitive toward structure, desired content, and perceived clergy tensions.
引用
收藏
页码:1413 / 1427
页数:14
相关论文
共 17 条
  • [1] Abrams D(2005)The Florida clergy end-of-life education enhancement project—a description and evaluation American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine 22 181-187
  • [2] Alcorn SR(2010)“If God wanted me yesterday, I wouldn’t be here today”: religious and spiritual themes in patients’ experiences of advanced cancer Journal of Palliative Medicine 13 581-588
  • [3] Balboni TA(2007)Religiousness and spiritual support among advanced cancer patients and associations with end-of-life treatment preferences and quality of life Journal of Clinical Oncology 25 555-560
  • [4] Balboni TA(2010)Provision of spiritual care to patients with advanced cancer: associations with medical care and quality of life near death Journal of Clinical Oncology 28 445-452
  • [5] Balboni MJ(2011)“It depends”: viewpoints of patients, physicians, and nurses on patient-practitioner prayer in the setting of advanced cancer Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 41 836-847
  • [6] Balboni TA(2013)Provision of spiritual support to patients with advanced cancer by religious communities and associations with medical care at the end of life JAMA Internal Medicine 173 1109-1117
  • [7] Balboni MJ(2013)Why is spiritual care infrequent at the end of life? Spiritual care perceptions among patients, nurses, and physicians and the role of training Journal of Clinical Oncology 31 461-467
  • [8] Balboni MJ(2017)U.S. clergy religious values and relationships to end-of-life discussions and care Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 53 999-1009
  • [9] Balboni MJ(2018)The views of clergy regarding ethical controversies in care at the end of life Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 55 65-74
  • [10] LeBaron VT(2015)Clergy views on a good versus a poor death: ministry to the terminally ill Journal of Palliative Medicine 18 1000-1007