Workings of the human spirit in palliative care situations: a consensus model from the Chaplaincy Research Consortium.

Journal: BMC palliative care

Volume: 14

Issue: 

Year of Publication: 2016

Affiliated Institutions:  Research and Education, HealthCare Chaplaincy Network, Broadway, th Floor, -, New York, NY, USA. l-emanuel@northwestern.edu. Research and Education, HealthCare Chaplaincy Network, Broadway, th Floor, -, New York, NY, USA. GHandzo@healthcarechaplaincy.org. Spiritual Health, Emory Healthcare, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA. ghgrant@emory.edu. Mission and Spiritual Care, Advocate Lutheran General Hospital, Chicago, Illinois, USA. kevin.massey@advocatehealth.com. Clinical Pastoral Education, Yale-New Haven Hospital, New Haven, CT, USA. azollfrank@mgh.harvard.edu. Center of Excellence for End-of-Life Transition Research, Department of Biobehavioral Health Science, College of Nursing, University of Illinois at Chicago, Illinois, USA. diwilkie@uic.edu. Research and Education, HealthCare Chaplaincy Network, Broadway, th Floor, -, New York, NY, USA. richardpowell@yahoo.co.uk. Research and Education, HealthCare Chaplaincy Network, Broadway, th Floor, -, New York, NY, USA. WSmith@healthcarechaplaincy.org. Psychology, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, , Ohio, USA. kpargam@bgsu.edu.

Abstract summary 

Chaplaincy is a relatively new discipline in medicine that provides for care of the human spirit in healthcare contexts for people of all worldviews. Studies indicate wide appreciation for its importance, yet empirical research is limited. Our purpose is to create a model of human spiritual processes and needs in palliative care situations so that researchers can locate their hypotheses in a common model which will evolve with relevant findings.The Model Building Subgroup worked with the Chaplaincy Research Consortium as part of a larger Templeton Foundation funded project to enhance research in the area. It met with members for an hour on three successive occasions over three years and exchanged drafts for open comment between meetings. All members of the Subgroup agreed on the final draft.The model uses modestly adapted existing definitions and models. It describes the human experience of spirituality during serious illness in three renditions: visual, mathematical, and verbal so that researchers can use whichever is applicable. The visual rendition has four domains: spiritual, psychological, physical and social with process arrows and permeable boundaries between all areas. The mathematical rendition has the same four factors and is rendered as an integral equation, corresponding to an integrative function postulated for the human spirit. In both renditions, the model is notable in its allowance for direct spiritual experience and a domain or factor in its own right, not only experience that is created through the others. The model does not describe anything beyond the human experience. The verbal rendition builds on existing work to describe the processes of the human spirit, relating it to the four domains or factors.A consensus model of the human spirit to generate hypotheses and evolve based on data has been delineated. Implications of the model for how the human spirit functions and how the chaplain can care for the patient or family caregiver's spiritual coping and well-being are discussed. The next step is to generate researchable hypotheses, results of research from which will give insight into the human spirit and guidance to chaplains caring for it.

Authors & Co-authors:  Emanuel Handzo Grant Massey Zollfrank Wilke Powell Smith Pargament

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations :  Shields M, Kestenbaum A, Dunn LB. Spiritual AIM and the Work of the Chaplain: A Model for Assessing Spiritual Needs and Outcomes in Relationship. Palliat Support Care. 2015;13(1):75–89. doi: 10.1017/S1478951513001120.
Authors :  9
Identifiers
Doi : 29
SSN : 1472-684X
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Adaptation, Psychological
Other Terms
Study Design
Study Approach
Country of Study
Publication Country
England