2018
DOI: 10.1177/1049909118807123
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What Do Chaplains Do: The Views of Palliative Care Physicians, Nurses, and Social Workers

Abstract: It is well accepted that attention to spiritual concerns is a core dimension of palliative care. It is similarly well accepted that chaplains are the spiritual care specialists who should address such concerns. However, what chaplains do when they provide care for patients and families is often poorly understood by their palliative care colleagues. Having a clear understanding of what chaplains do is important because it contributes to improved utilization of the spiritual care and other resources of the palli… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…First, participants gained knowledge of healthcare chaplaincy services and pastoral care, evidenced by quantitative data indicating a greater understanding of the chaplain's role as well as the qualitative data that indicated common themes of learned knowledge and surprise surrounding the chaplain's diverse set of roles in the hospital setting. These findings are significant given studies documenting physicians' incomplete knowledge of the training, scope of practice, and skills of professional chaplains [8,19,20], even among palliative care providers [21]. Similarly, published findings show that in many intensive care units, chaplains are an underutilized resource [22].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…First, participants gained knowledge of healthcare chaplaincy services and pastoral care, evidenced by quantitative data indicating a greater understanding of the chaplain's role as well as the qualitative data that indicated common themes of learned knowledge and surprise surrounding the chaplain's diverse set of roles in the hospital setting. These findings are significant given studies documenting physicians' incomplete knowledge of the training, scope of practice, and skills of professional chaplains [8,19,20], even among palliative care providers [21]. Similarly, published findings show that in many intensive care units, chaplains are an underutilized resource [22].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Chaplains are not the only ones to blame for the confusion around their role. As chaplains are providing spiritual care to patients/residents, family members and staff on a daily basis, healthcare management and other key healthcare professionals remain oblivious to understanding chaplaincy as a speciality, providing a contextualised, multi-layered contribution to health care (Damen et al., 2019). There are widespread ongoing misconceptions that chaplains exclusively provide religious support that is easily replaced by the religious support from representatives of local faith communities.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This may reflect other healthcare professionals' unfamiliarity with the kind of contributions chaplains can make to the palliative care provided to patients and families. 20 Chaplains have a critical role to play in the provision of quality palliative care, but the level of their involvement in the palliative care team impacts the scope of their practice. 12 This study has several limitations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%