Fraser Health axes model spiritual care program

Comments

hospital spiritual care is one of those things that everyone ignores or takes for granted ... until it is they themselves who are wired up to a confusing array of beeping machines ... and no one is there to call on to share their fears and worries with them ... I wonder how long it will take before a volunteer spiritual care giver will be asked to leave a ward because they are not family or medical staff and the patient did not give prior permission on some form for them to stay after visiting hours to uphold someone in prayer and comfort in a time of crisis...
#1 Colin - 11/19/2009 - 18:24

When we realize that the whole person is made up of 4 parts ( physical, psychological, emotional, and spiritual), it is very, very sad to see spiritual care being attacked. Countless people are healed and/or get through difficult situations because of prayer and support in the hospital - most done by the spiritual care team. I'm sure there are other less important areas that could take the cuts!
#2 Dawn magee - 11/19/2009 - 22:35

This is interesting - and horsefeathers - and relates to last week's $$$ debate!

About 5 years ago here in Nova Scotia pretty much the same thing happened. A few paid hospital chaplains remain and the megachurches [the big five: ACC, UCC, RC, Baptist and Pentecostal] continue to whine about proselytisation in hospitals, care homes and even palliative care facilities.

Yet their priests are AWOL; absent and no-shows. The rectory phone is directed to the answering device out of hours. [And sometimes during regular 'business' hours].

In BC, it seems that they want extra priviledges for simply doing their job.

Hospital triage is a religious joke in NS: you can be Islamic; Buddhist; Hindu; Sikh; Jewish BUT you cannot be Christian!!! It's not in the hospital computer; however, sundry Christian denominations are... Sorry folks, I am a Christian and proud of it! That is my religion; denominational affiliation plays right into the Mammon debate because the denomination is who you PAY every week!

Abba Ministries of Canada is a cross denominational Christian church whose priests are volunteers: they are unpaid; but they tithe to support their church. They work in the community FOC as Jesus did.

Drug rehab; prisons; hospitals; youth and childrens programs; general ministry; church administration; geriatric and palliative care; school chaplaincy; etecetera, etcetera.

My wife, Rev Josephine Egan is a good example: she volunteers many hours each week! In the last 10 days, just for example, she officiated at remembrance Service for a local Geriatric facility; she visited two such facilities; she sat with a patient in palliative care, celebrated the Eucharist and held the patients hand until she died. [Family were not present]. Josephine runs a small community church as priest-in-charge; this week arranging two wedings for 2010; three baptisms [we baptize 'Christian' by the wat; nothing else. Plus the other usual commitments

When the phone rings in our rectory at 2:30 AM it's always bad news; an accident; a patient close to death; a mother who needs help at the city morgue. Strangely, the conversation [usually with the police] starts thus: "Sorry to call at this hour, we called Saint Mark's/Father Bunloaf/the chaplains office and we got the message machine again!

Spiritual Care should not be about Money or Politics or some pathetic Religious turf war, rather it should be about priests and others showing the same love and compassion that Jesus Christ did to the sick, the distressed and the dying.

Get thee back to basics people and forget about the perks and the salary!

+Malachy

National Pastor and Bishp
Abba Ministries of Canada
#3 Rev. Malachy Egan - 11/20/2009 - 08:04

It doesn't matter if it is a volunteer or a paid person that helps someone in the hospital. I had a volunteer sit with me in a time when I needed some support who was totally there for me - when the paid pastoral care person showed up (after 9:00 a.m.) they were awful. Just because you pay someone doesn't make them better - sometimes it makes them worse.
#4 Elisabeth - 11/21/2009 - 20:49

We believe taken care of the total person, including the Spititual. As staff we have called many times the pastor during a shift.
We also deal with many homeless, who have benefitted from pastoral care. How much more frontline cutting are we going to get.
#5 willy - 11/25/2009 - 03:36

We believe taken care of the total person, including the Spiritual. As staff we have called many times the pastor during a shift.
We also deal with many homeless, who have benefitted from pastoral care. How much more frontline cutting are we going to get.
#6 willy - 11/25/2009 - 03:38

It seems now that God is also dead in hospitals. Fraser Health calls his people unworthy. At a time when the hospitals are severly overcrowded,where a hallway is a room, a stretcher is a bed , and there is no time for anyone to look after the needs of th e sick, dying and greif stricken loved ones. I find this appalling and extremely sad, for those of who have used the services of our hospital Chaplains in times of need. May God help us all. Healthcare is falling apart. We live in a time when our governments wont allow prayer in school, now they have disallowed hin to the sick, the dying and the greif stricken. Thank you Fraser Health. Leona Wraight, Chilliwack
#7 l Wraight - 11/25/2009 - 12:17

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