| Literature DB >> 27317100 |
Julian Raffay1, Emily Wood2, Andrew Todd2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Within the UK National Health Service (NHS), Spiritual and Pastoral Care (SPC) Services (chaplaincies) have not traditionally embraced research due to the intangible nature of their work. However, small teams like SPC can lead the way towards services across the NHS becoming patient- centred and patient-led. Using co-production principles within research can ensure it, and the resulting services, are truly patient-led.Entities:
Keywords: Chaplaincy; Co-production; Grounded theory; Participation; Qualitative research; Service user perspectives; Spiritual and pastoral care
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27317100 PMCID: PMC4912777 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-016-0903-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Key definitions: Chaplaincy, spirituality, religion, pastoral, and resilience
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Chaplaincy | Modern healthcare chaplaincy is a service and profession working within the NHS that is focused on ensuring that all people, be they religious or not, have the opportunity to access pastoral, spiritual or religious support when they need it [ |
| Spirituality | A phenomenon unique to the individual and has been defined as the “breath” that animates life or a sense of connection to oneself, others, and that which is beyond self and others, spirituality is an individual construct, denoting a personal relationship with the transcendent [ |
| Religion | Religion is an organised system of beliefs, practices, rituals and symbols designed a) to facilitate closeness to the sacred or transcendent (God, higher power, or ultimate truth/reality) and b) to foster an understanding of one’s relationship and responsibility to others in living together in a community. [ |
| Pastoral care | Pastoral care is rooted in non-judgemental listening and attentiveness to service-users, carers and staff. It pays supportive and enabling attention to a range of human needs and aspirations, in the context of healthcare, being especially alert to questions of identity and belief (whether presented as religious, spiritual or neither of those). |
| Resilience | Resilience is the ability of an individual to respond to stress in a way that is healthy and adaptive and allows personal goals to be achieved with the minimum psychological and physical cost [ |
Participant demographics
| Demographic | Type | Number of participants |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | 17 |
| Female | 5 | |
| Age | Under 40 | 5 |
| 40–59 | 8 | |
| 60 and over | 6 | |
| Relationship to the Trust | Open acute ward service user | 10 |
| Secure^ ward service user | 7 | |
| Community service user | 2 | |
| Carer | 3 | |
| Faith group | Atheist | 1 |
| Did not identify | 2 | |
| Multiple | 1 | |
| Christian (no denomination) | 1 | |
| Church of England | 5 | |
| Roman Catholic | 8 | |
| Pentecostal | 2 | |
| United Reform | 1 | |
| Born-Again | 1 |
^Secure in this context refers to high and medium secure mental health units. It does not include psychiatric intensive care (PICU), low secure units, or prison inreach services
Fig. 1A category map illustrating the breadth of views elicited in the interviews
Helpful services provided by SPC staff
| Religious provision | Pastoral provision |
|---|---|
| Formal religious service | Listening |
| Prayer | The social side of religious services |
| Spiritual advice/guidance | Providing an emotional connection |
| Holy Communion* | Providing hope/self-worth |
| Confession^ | A critical friend |
| Normalising faith | A bridge between community and ward |
| ‘Tending the good in someone’ |
*Holy Communion, shared between Christians, involves breaking bread and wine to commemorate Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection. It is usually a communal ceremony
^Confession, a mainly Roman Catholic practice, involves sharing perceived wrongdoings with a priest in the anticipation of divine forgiveness
Participants’ views on what made a ‘good chaplain’
| Human qualities | ‘Man of God’ |
|---|---|
| Non-judgemental | Be a ‘man of God’ |
| Honest | Church leader/spiritual training (whether this necessitates ordination varies) |
| Approachable | |
| Trustworthy | Walk with God |
| Genuine | Have a prayerful life |
| Kind | Have a genuine relationship with God |
| Friendly | Bring the word of God |
| Confidence | The ability to represent multiple faiths |
| Empathetic | Channel the Grace of God |
| Critical friend | |
| Have time | |
| Good communication | |
| Life experience | |
| Down to Earth | |
| Knowledge of the mental health system |
Fig. 2A representation of the bio-psycho-social model
Fig. 3The traditional view of the bio-psycho-social-spiritual model
Fig. 4A revised bio-psycho-social-spiritual model of care