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Research literacy is now a requirement for Board-Certified chaplains in the US and a growing field in the UK. This reader gives an overview and introduction to the field of healthcare chaplaincy research. The 21 carefully chosen articles in this book illustrate techniques critical to chaplaincy research: case studies; qualitative research; cross-sectional and longitudinal quantitative research, and randomized clinical trials. The selected articles also address wide-ranging topics in chaplaincy research for a comprehensive overview of the field. To help readers engage with the research, each…mehr
Research literacy is now a requirement for Board-Certified chaplains in the US and a growing field in the UK. This reader gives an overview and introduction to the field of healthcare chaplaincy research. The 21 carefully chosen articles in this book illustrate techniques critical to chaplaincy research: case studies; qualitative research; cross-sectional and longitudinal quantitative research, and randomized clinical trials. The selected articles also address wide-ranging topics in chaplaincy research for a comprehensive overview of the field.
To help readers engage with the research, each article includes a discussion guide highlighting crucial content, as well as important background information and implications for further research. This book is the perfect primary text for healthcare chaplaincy research courses, bringing together key articles from peer-reviewed journals in one student-friendly format.
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Autorenporträt
Edited by George Fitchett, Kelsey B. White and Kathryn Lyndes
Inhaltsangabe
Section I. Healthcare Chaplains: Where They Work & What They Do .1. The Provision of Hospital Chaplaincy in the United States: A National Overview (2008). Wendy Cadge, Department of Sociology, Brandeis University, Jeremy Freese, Department of Sociology, Northwestern University and Nicholas A. Christakis, Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School. 2. "He Needs to Talk!": A Chaplain's Case Study of Nonreligious Spiritual Care (2016). Steve Nolan, Princess Alice Hospice; University of Winchester. 3. What do I do? Developing a taxonomy of chaplaincy activities and interventions for spiritual care in intensive care unit palliative care (2015). Kevin Massey, Advocate Health Care, Marilyn JD Barnes, Dana Villines, Julie D Goldstein, Anna Lee Hisey Pierson, Cheryl Scherer, Betty Vander Laan and Wm Thomas Summerfelt. 4. Communicating Chaplains' Care: Narrative Documentation in a Neuroscience-Spine Intensive Care Unit (2016). Rebecca Johnson, Buehler Center On Aging, Health & Society, Northwestern University, M. Jeanne Wirpsa, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Lara Boyken, Buehler Center On Aging, Health & Society, Northwestern University, Matthew Sakumoto, Northwestern University Feinberg School Of Medicine, George Handzo, Healthcare Chaplaincy Network, Abel Kho, Northwestern University Feinberg School Of Medicine and Linda Emanuel, Buehler Center On Aging, Health & Society. 5. Determining best methods to screen for religious/spiritual distress (2017). Stephen D. W. King, Chaplaincy, Child Life, & Clinical Patient Navigators, Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, George Fitchett and Patricia E. Murphy, Department of Religion, Health & Human Values, Rush University Medical Center, Kenneth I. Pargament, Department of Psychology, Bowling Green State University, David A. Harrison, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine and Elizabeth Trice Loggers, Clinical Research Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. 6.The spiritual distress assessment tool: an instrument to assess spiritual distress in hospitalised elderly persons (2010). Stefanie M Monod, Service of Geriatric Medicine & Geriatric Rehabilitation, University of Lausanne Medical Center, Etienne Rochat, Service of Geriatric Medicine & Geriatric Rehabilitation and Chaplaincy Service, University of Lausanne Medical Center, Christophe J Büla, Service of Geriatric Medicine & Geriatric Rehabilitation, University of Lausanne Medical Center, Guy Jobin, Faculty of Theology and Religious Sciences, University of Laval, Estelle Martin, Service of Geriatric Medicine & Geriatric Rehabilitation, University of Lausanne Medical Center and Brenda Spencer, Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine (IUMSP), University Hospital Center and University of Lausanne. Section II Patient/Family Spiritual Needs & Spiritual Care Interest. 7. The Spiritual and Theological Challenges of Stillbirth for Bereaved Parents (2017). Daniel Nuzum, Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University College Cork, Cork University Maternity Hospital, Sarah Meaney, National Perinatal Epidemiology Centre, University College Cork and Keelin O'Donoghue, Irish Centre for Fetal and Neonatal Translational Research (INFANT), Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University College Cork, Cork University Maternity Hospital. 8. Identifying Religious and/or Spiritual Perspectives of Adolescents and Young Adults Receiving Blood and Marrow Transplants: A Prospective Qualitative Study (2014). Judith R. Ragsdale, Mary Ann Hegner, Mark Mueller and Stella Davies, Cincinnati Children's Hospital. 9. Adolescents' Spirituality and Cystic Fibrosis Airway Clearance Treatment Adherence: Examining Mediators (2016). Daniel H. Grossoehme. Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Rhonda D. Szczesniak, Division of Pulmonary Medicine and Division Biostatistics and Epidemiology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Sylvie Mrug, Department of Psychology, University of Alabama, Sophia
Section I. Healthcare Chaplains: Where They Work & What They Do .1. The Provision of Hospital Chaplaincy in the United States: A National Overview (2008). Wendy Cadge, Department of Sociology, Brandeis University, Jeremy Freese, Department of Sociology, Northwestern University and Nicholas A. Christakis, Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School. 2. "He Needs to Talk!": A Chaplain's Case Study of Nonreligious Spiritual Care (2016). Steve Nolan, Princess Alice Hospice; University of Winchester. 3. What do I do? Developing a taxonomy of chaplaincy activities and interventions for spiritual care in intensive care unit palliative care (2015). Kevin Massey, Advocate Health Care, Marilyn JD Barnes, Dana Villines, Julie D Goldstein, Anna Lee Hisey Pierson, Cheryl Scherer, Betty Vander Laan and Wm Thomas Summerfelt. 4. Communicating Chaplains' Care: Narrative Documentation in a Neuroscience-Spine Intensive Care Unit (2016). Rebecca Johnson, Buehler Center On Aging, Health & Society, Northwestern University, M. Jeanne Wirpsa, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Lara Boyken, Buehler Center On Aging, Health & Society, Northwestern University, Matthew Sakumoto, Northwestern University Feinberg School Of Medicine, George Handzo, Healthcare Chaplaincy Network, Abel Kho, Northwestern University Feinberg School Of Medicine and Linda Emanuel, Buehler Center On Aging, Health & Society. 5. Determining best methods to screen for religious/spiritual distress (2017). Stephen D. W. King, Chaplaincy, Child Life, & Clinical Patient Navigators, Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, George Fitchett and Patricia E. Murphy, Department of Religion, Health & Human Values, Rush University Medical Center, Kenneth I. Pargament, Department of Psychology, Bowling Green State University, David A. Harrison, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine and Elizabeth Trice Loggers, Clinical Research Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. 6.The spiritual distress assessment tool: an instrument to assess spiritual distress in hospitalised elderly persons (2010). Stefanie M Monod, Service of Geriatric Medicine & Geriatric Rehabilitation, University of Lausanne Medical Center, Etienne Rochat, Service of Geriatric Medicine & Geriatric Rehabilitation and Chaplaincy Service, University of Lausanne Medical Center, Christophe J Büla, Service of Geriatric Medicine & Geriatric Rehabilitation, University of Lausanne Medical Center, Guy Jobin, Faculty of Theology and Religious Sciences, University of Laval, Estelle Martin, Service of Geriatric Medicine & Geriatric Rehabilitation, University of Lausanne Medical Center and Brenda Spencer, Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine (IUMSP), University Hospital Center and University of Lausanne. Section II Patient/Family Spiritual Needs & Spiritual Care Interest. 7. The Spiritual and Theological Challenges of Stillbirth for Bereaved Parents (2017). Daniel Nuzum, Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University College Cork, Cork University Maternity Hospital, Sarah Meaney, National Perinatal Epidemiology Centre, University College Cork and Keelin O'Donoghue, Irish Centre for Fetal and Neonatal Translational Research (INFANT), Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University College Cork, Cork University Maternity Hospital. 8. Identifying Religious and/or Spiritual Perspectives of Adolescents and Young Adults Receiving Blood and Marrow Transplants: A Prospective Qualitative Study (2014). Judith R. Ragsdale, Mary Ann Hegner, Mark Mueller and Stella Davies, Cincinnati Children's Hospital. 9. Adolescents' Spirituality and Cystic Fibrosis Airway Clearance Treatment Adherence: Examining Mediators (2016). Daniel H. Grossoehme. Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Rhonda D. Szczesniak, Division of Pulmonary Medicine and Division Biostatistics and Epidemiology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Sylvie Mrug, Department of Psychology, University of Alabama, Sophia
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