From ‘Pastoral Contacts' to ‘Pastoral Interventions'

Authors

  • Lindsay Carey Australian Health & Welfare Chaplains Association
  • Mark Cobb Sheffield Teaching Hospitals
  • David Equeall Sheffield Teaching Hospitals

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/hscc.v8.i2.14

Keywords:

pastoral care, WHO, pastoral intervention, codings

Abstract

This research collates statistical results of pastoral care contacts undertaken at the Sheffield Northern General Hospital and the Royal Hallamshire Hospital over a twelve month period. The data was found to provide an important overview of chaplaincy work that can be used for future pastoral care management and developing better data collection and quality assurance measurements. The data was subsequently categorised using the World Health Organization (WHO) Pastoral Intervention (PI) Codings to explore the use of a newly developed universal coding system that might allow national and international data collection and comparison. Overall the data from the Sheffield Teaching Hospitals' pastoral data base was found to be easily transferable to the WHO PI codings. This report of the research offers recommendations for recording chaplaincy activity that at present is unrecorded and by doing so might reflect a more accurate picture of the role and demands of chaplaincy services.

Author Biographies

  • Lindsay Carey, Australian Health & Welfare Chaplains Association

    Lindsay Carey, M.App.Sc, is National Research Officer for the Australian Health & Welfare Chaplains Association on secondment to the Chaplaincy Department, National Health Service, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, Sheffield.

  • Mark Cobb, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals

    Mark Cobb is Senior Chaplain and Director of Professional Services at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, National Health Service Foundation Trust, South Yorkshire.

  • David Equeall, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals

    David Equeall is Chaplaincy Manager, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, National Health Service Foundation Trust, South Yorkshire

References

CAREY, L.B., HOLMES, C., NEVEN, E. (2004) Ringwood Private Hospital Chaplaincy & Pastoral Care Service Pilot Program. Ministry, Society & Theology, Vol. 18, No.2.

CAREY, L.B. & MEECE, C. (2005) Do pastoral care and spirituality services make a positive difference?: Results from a quality assurance evaluation undertaken at the Royal Women’s Hospital, Melbourne, Ministry, Society & Theology, July, Vol. 19, No. 1 [In Press].

CAREY L.B. and NEWELL C. (2004) Chaplaincy in the clinical context. AUS. CUR, Melbourne.

CAREY, L.B. (2002) 'Health Care Chaplaincy Guidelines and the ICD-10-AM Pastoral Interventions: Some interim considerations', Ministry, Society & Theology, Vol. 16, No. 2, p. 72 - 85.

CAREY, L.B., ARONI, R., EDWARDS, A. (1997) Health and Wellbeing: Hospital Chaplaincy, In, H. Gardner (1997) Health Policy in Australia, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, p. 190 – 210.

COBB, M., DALEY, J., BLACKBURN, H., LOWE, K., ENSOR, G., EQUEALL, D. (2004) Enhancing patient consent in the disclosure and use of personal data by chaplains. Chaplaincy Department, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, National Health Service Foundation Trust, pp. 1 – 54.

COBB, M. (1998) Assessing spiritual needs: An examination of practice. In: M. Cobb & V. Robshaw. The spiritual challenge of health care. London, Churchill-Livingstone, p. 105 - 119.

DoH (2003)NHS Chaplaincy: Meeting the religious and spiritual needs of patients and staff. London: Department of Health

DoH (2004a) The NHS Knowledge and Skills Framework. London: Department of Health

DoH (2004b) NHS Job Evaluation Handbook. London: Department of Health

HCCS (1998 / 1993) Health Care Chaplaincy Standards. Health Care Chaplaincy Council, United Kingdom

McFARLIN, P. & CAREY, L.B. (2004) I’m not religious … But please pray: The coding of pastoral visits by Anglican Chaplains at the Royal Adelaide Hospital. Ministry, Society & Theology, Vol. 18, No. 2 [In press].

NHS-DoH (2005) Agenda for Change: NHS Terms and Conditions of Service Handbook, National Health Service, Department of Health.

NHS HDL (2002) Guidelines on Chaplaincy and Spiritual Care in the NHS in Scotland. NHS Health Department Letter 76 (2002), Edinburgh: Scottish Executive Health Department

NHS-WDC (2003) Caring for the spirit: A strategy for chaplaincy and spiritual healthcare workforce, South Yorkshire Workforce Development Confederation, National Health Service, United Kingdom, pp. 1 – 43.

SYWDC (2003) Caring for the Spirit: a strategy for the chaplaincy and spiritual healthcare workforce. Sheffield: South Yorkshire Workforce Development Confederation

WHO (2002) ‘Pastoral Intervention Codings’, International Classification of Diseases, World Health Organization, Geneva, ICD-10-AM. Vol. 10, 3rd Edition.

Published

2013-04-08

How to Cite

Carey, L., Cobb, M., & Equeall, D. (2013). From ‘Pastoral Contacts’ to ‘Pastoral Interventions’. Health and Social Care Chaplaincy, 8(2), 14-20. https://doi.org/10.1558/hscc.v8.i2.14

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 > >>