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Advocacy
 

Mr. Nick Jacobs responds to the need for spiritual support

What About Spiritual Care?

Editor’s Note: On February 14, 2007, an article on spiritual care appeared in USA Today. Nick Jacobs sent this response to various interested others. It was sent to PlainViews by Emanuel Williams MDiv, BCC, Health Care Chaplaincy Ministries. We contacted Mr. Jacobs who has graciously allowed us to print this in PlainViews.

 

From an article in USA Today entitled “Health System Struggles with Spiritual Care,” comes the following quote: “For patients who are dying of cancer, few things are as profound as their relationship with God.” Later in the article there is reference to Tracy Balboni’s study on the spiritual needs of dying patients. “She found that 88% of terminal cancer patients said religion was at least somewhat important to them. And about half had been visited by clergy. Yet Balboni’s research also suggests that hospitals, doctors and even religious communities fail to support the spiritual needs of their cancer patients at the end of life.”

The article went on to say that 70% of the patients’ spiritual needs weren't being met by hospital chaplains or others in the health care system.

As a zealot in total support of palliative care and hospice programs, these numbers were not a shock to me, but were, in fact, a further signal that our current national health care system is NOT meeting the needs of our patients.

Those individuals who felt that their spiritual support was adequate also reported that their quality of life on a fifty point scale was nearly 15 points higher than those without spiritual care.

Far be it from me to suggest that we force religion on anyone, but, having said that, there is no reason why spiritual support is not more readily available to our patients. There are hundreds of reasons why our peers don't do this; HIPAA, fear of imposing religious beliefs on patients, or just a lack of belief in the entire concept of the contribution that spiritual care brings to a patient’s care, but we here at Windber Medical Center know profoundly what the true contribution can be from spiritual involvement to all of our patients. We typically deal with hundreds of thousands of patients each year, and one of our commitments to them is the availability of clergy, Eucharistic ministers, and spiritual professionals in our facility or available to our patients 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

In God we trust, whomever or whatever you believe that God to be. It is not our intent to confine your beliefs, to restrict your beliefs or to attempt to change your beliefs. It is purely our intent to help to support our patients’ beliefs. Is your facility supporting your patients?

 

To read the article to which Mr. Jacobs is referring, please go to:
http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2007-02-14-spiritual_x.htm?csp=34&POE=click-refer


Mr. Nick Jacobs is president of Windber Medical Center and the Windber Research Institute in Windber, PA. Mr. Jacobs was a co-founder of the Windber Research Institute. This translational medicine proteomic and genomic research institute is an international research center for heart, breast and reproductive diseases. Mr. Jacobs holds a master's degree in Public Management/Health Systems Management from Carnegie Mellon University, and master's and bachelor's degrees in Education from Indiana University of Pennsylvania. He has been awarded Certification from The Grantsmanship Center at the College of William and Mary and a Certificate in Health Care Management from the Harvard School of Public Health. Mr. Jacobs is a Fellow of the American College of Health Care Executives. He currently serves on the Board of Directors of the international hospital organization, Planetree, the Hospital Council of Western PA, and is Chairman of the Board of the American Red Cross Disaster Relief Services. Many of his writings have been published in healthcare magazines and he has been prominently featured in The Wall Street Journal.


Do you have thoughts about advocacy you’d like to share with your colleagues? Send an e-mail to info@PlainViews.org.



2/21/2007 Vol. 4, No. 2 - Responses to the imperative that we write about what we do
2/7/2007 Vol. 4, No. 1 - Rev. Dr. Martha R. Jacobs: claiming what we do
1/17/2007 Vol. 3, No. 24 - Chaplain Gerald Ash: what we do
1/3/2007 Vol. 3, No. 23 - Chaplain Larry Hirst: power that can corrupt
12/20/2006 Vol. 3, No. 22 - Once again, continuing the conversation on the use of volunteer chaplains
12/6/2006 Vol. 3, No. 21 - Continuing the conversation: the use of volunteer chaplains
11/15/2006 Vol. 3, No. 20 - TalkBack on Volunteer Chaplains –the conversation continues

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3/7/2007 Vol. 4, No. 3
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Professional Practice
Rabbi Levi Meier, Ph.D.: rejoicing over the torah
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Advocacy
Mr. Nick Jacobs responds to the need for spiritual support
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Education & Research
Chaplain Larry Hirst: providing clear, honest information
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Spiritual Development
Rev. Stephen Harding: what comes from God
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EthicsWalk
Anne Underwood, MS, JD: using your lawyer wisely
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CaseConference
How to submit a case
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Reviews
Sarah Masters reviews: Dharma River: Journey of a Thousand Buddhas

Rev. George A. Burn reviews: The Work of the Chaplain
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