MGH
program teaches caregivers to tend to the spiritual need of patients
06/11/2007
By: Judy Foreman
The lovely chapel at Massachusetts
General Hospital was crammed with flowers and
well-wishers one recent afternoon, as seven newly
certified spiritual caregivers -- five nurses, a
social worker, and a medical student -- took to the
microphone.
The graduates of the five-month
program spoke of praying with a homeless,
schizophrenic man as his foot infection was treated
and his toenails clipped. They spoke of helping a
man with veins ruined by intravenous drug use pray
to his Higher Power to ease the pain as an IV needle
was inserted. They spoke of the need to make medical
care more "sacred" -- to comfort by being with, not
just doing to, a patient.
Or, as their mentor, Mass. General
chaplain the Rev. Angelika Zollfrank put it: Of
learning to "hold patients in deeper and more
meaningful ways."
Studies have repeatedly shown that
patients in hospitals have religious or spiritual
needs, and that very often those needs go unmet.
Earlier this year, for example,
Dr. Tracy A. Balboni and colleagues at the Harvard
Radiation Oncology Program and elsewhere found that
72 percent of advanced cancer patients felt their
spiritual needs were going unaddressed by the
medical system.
Now, places such as the Kenneth B.
Schwartz Center at Mass. General are increasingly
recognizing those needs. The idea is "not to impose
God or a Higher Power on a nonbeliever," said
Kathleen Gallivan , director of the chaplaincy
department at Brigham and Women's Hospital. But to
ask "a patient whether religion or spirituality is a
resource for them."
"Illness is always a crisis in
meaning," Gallivan said. People wonder, "Why is this
happening to me? What does it mean for my future?
For my family? For my job?"
Gallivan said she's eager to do
more to meet patients' spiritual needs at the
Brigham.
At Mass. General, the Clinical
Pastoral Education program trains people who are
already healthcare providers to attend better to
their patients' spiritual needs.
The Joint Commission, formerly the
Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations, has for years "required hospitals to
accommodate the rights to pastoral and other
spiritual services for patients," said Pat Adamski ,
director of the standards interpretation group at
the commission.
There are also efforts in
academia, like those sponsored by the John Templeton
Foundation, a Philadelphia-based nonprofit group, to
study how spiritual questions might be better
addressed in the medical system.
Ten years ago, a pivotal study
found that 88 percent of patients experienced
"religious needs" while hospitalized, George
Fitchett , the study leader and director of research
in the Department of Religion, Health, and Human
Values at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago,
said in an e-mail.
Since then, studies have found
that severely ill patients often face a spiritual or
religious as well as a medical crisis when they are
in the hospital.
At Duke University Medical Center,
for instance, Dr. Harold G. Koenig a psychiatrist
and co-director of the school's Center for
Spirituality, Theology, and Health, said his
research has found that 90 percent of patients rely
on religious beliefs to help them cope with the
stress of illness.
Yet a patient satisfaction survey
conducted in 2001 on more than 1.7 million
hospitalized patients by Press Ganey Associates
found that patients' spiritual needs often go unmet,
calling the area a "prime opportunity" for
improvement by hospitals.
All of which seems a shame, given
how little it takes for patients to feel that their
inner life counts.
In a 2005 paper, clinical
psychologist Jean Kristeller and her team at Indiana
State University randomly assigned 118 cancer
patients to be asked or not asked a few standardized
questions about their spiritual needs during a
routine office visit.
Just being asked the questions,
without any subsequent intervention, was
surprisingly effective: Three weeks later, patients
who had been questioned reported being less
depressed, having more improvement in quality of
life, and being more likely to believe their doctor
cared about them than those who were not asked.
While psychiatrists,
psychologists, and social workers also help patients
wrestle with such questions, hospital chaplains are
more fully trained to help people use their
spiritual resources to cope with illness.
"Pretty much everybody else has a
task to do. But the task of the chaplain, or a
pastorally trained person, is to just sit with the
person and find out what their agenda is," Gallivan
said. "Our job is to be, not to do."
But chaplains can only do so much.
Since 1980, the number of American
hospitals with chaplains has remained roughly
constant -- between 54 and 64 percent, said Wendy
Cadge , a Brandeis University sociologist.
If more hospitals followed the
Schwartz Center's lead and began offering pastoral
training to nurses -- and doctors -- it wouldn't be
up to chaplains alone to fill the need.
That's what most inspires the
youngest of the Schwartz Center graduates, 26-year
old Alyssa Rosen , a singer and fourth-year student
at Harvard Medical School.
Dark eyes and dark hair shining at
the graduation, Rosen, a future pediatrician, said
her goal is to "be the technically skilled physician
I am growing into without giving up the sacred human
connections that call to me."
Judy Foreman’s column runs every other week. Past
columns are available on
www.myhealthsense.com.
Listen to her live
call-in webcast radio show every Wednesday night
from 8:30 to 9:30 EST on
http://www.healthtalk.com.