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Surviving Chronic Illness Preserving Self Honoring Spirit

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Title: Surviving Chronic Illness Preserving Self Honoring Spirit


1
Surviving Chronic Illness Preserving Self
Honoring Spirit
  • Gretchen May-Fendo M.Div.,RRT, AE-C
  • Outpatient Pulmonary Coordinator
  • Reiki Master-Norma Pfriem Cancer Center
  • Bridgeport Hospital, Bridgeport, CT

2
The Epidemic of Chronic Illness
  • 1987 -90 million Americans have a chronic
    illness
  • 1998- number grew to 120 million
  • at least 45 of all Americans have a chronic
    illness
  • this accounts for 78 of our health care costs
  • 2030- the number of Americans with chronic
    illness----171 million
  • Jeffery H. Boyd, M.D., M.P.H. Being Sick
    Well, Baker Books, 2005

3
3 reasons for the rapid increase
  • Aging of the population
  • Success of medical science
  • good medical care actually increases the amount
    of chronic illness
  • illness diagnosed earlier
  • many patients who may have died survive
  • Worsening Obesity
  • CDC estimates obesity will soon surpass smoking
    cigarettes as the 1preventable cause of
    morbidity mortality.
  • Jeffery H. Boyd, M.D.,M.P.H. Being Sick Well,
  • Baker Books, 2005

4
The Impact of COPDSource Global Initiative for
Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease, 200118
5
Life with Chronic Illness
  • The diagnosis of chronic illness has a
    significant impact on the patient and their
    caregivers
  • Few persons are prepared to live with chronic
    illness.
  • Chronic illness involves suffering.
  • Suffering is one of the most profound and
    disturbing of human experiences.1
  • Suffering does not refer to just maladies, and
    pains, with which we can and should cope.
  • 1.Stan van Hooft, Hastings Center Report,
    28, 5, 1998

6
Suffering
  • Involves crisis and threats that constitute a
    degradation or alienation of our being.
  • Eric J. Cassell, The Nature of Suffering and the
    Goals of Medicine, 2nd ed.,2003)

7
Living with Lung Disease
  • 58 percent say they panic when they cannot get
    their breath
  • 52 percent feel they are not in control of their
    breathing and
  • 52 percent admit that their coughing is
    embarrassing in public.
  • 47 percent say they have a hard time making plans
    because of their condition
  • 39 percent worry about having serious breathing
    problems when away from home.
  • 66 percent say they expect their condition to get
    worse.
  • AARC, Confronting COPD in America, 2000
  • 600 people with COPD interviewed

8
Chronic illness affects the person on many
levels and can bring suffering on all of these
levels
  • Psychologically
  • Socially
  • Physically
  • Spiritually

9
Psychological ImpactSome patients say,
  • They may feel unsafe by themselves.
  • Loss of independence
  • Fear
  • They have a change in self perception/self image
  • Feelings of loss
  • Grief

10
Social Impact
  • Due to changing self perception the person may
    limit social interactions
  • I dont like being seen with oxygen on.
  • Fear of exposure to germs may lead to decreased
    social interactions.
  • I am afraid that if I get another infection Ill
    die, so I dont go to parties anymore.

11
Physically
  • We cannot rely exclusively on physiologic
    outcomes for
  • evaluating and assessing a patients well
    being.
  • Or evaluating and assessing your own well being.

12
Spiritual Impact
  • Feelings of Isolation
  • Why me?/ Why me, God?
  • Feelings of abandonment that can lead to
    spiritual alienation

13
Further issues for those with chronic illness
  • Chronic Illness may make a person question their
    beliefs and values.
  • Chronic illness creates uncertainty about life.
  • How does one feel if they perceive themselves as
    impaired?
  • Am I still whole?
  • The image of self changes
  • And, our culture values/highlights youth,
    vitality, and health
  • Our culture often cloisters painful events

14
People become introspective
  • Questions arise about the value of life
  • Philosophical/Existential questions
  • The disease strikes right at the heart of how we
    value ourselves and how we perceive others will
    continue to value us.
  • Will I be a burden?
  • Can I remain independent?
  • How do I do what I did before as an able
    bodied person?
  • Again,
  • alienation may occur,
  • suffering may exist

15
People with chronic illness have to work harder
at well being
  • Well being is more complex than just having good
    health
  • It involves
  • Mind
  • Body
  • Spirit
  • It involves the whole person

16
The person may experience
  • Denial
  • Anger
  • Bargaining
  • Depression/grief
  • Acceptance
  • Elisabeth Kubler-Ross

17
So why talk spirituality?
  • Studies have shown that
  • There is a positive correlation between
    spirituality and the ability to cope with chronic
    illness.
  • M.Michelle Rowe, American Journal of Health
    Studies,
  • Winter 2004

18
God, Faith and Health.
  • About 80-90 of these studies show there is
    something positive going on. Were swimming in
    empirical evidence.
  • Jeff Levin, Ph.D., M.P.H.

19
Spirituality and Medical Practice
  • Studies suggest that many patients believe
    spirituality plays an important role in their
    lives
  • that there is a positive correlation between
    patient's spirituality or religious commitment
    and health outcomes
  • Patients would like physicians to consider this
    factor in their medical care.
  • Gowri Anandarajah,M.D., Spirituality and
    Medical Practice, American Family
    Physician, vol 63, 1

20
Spirituality, Well-Being and QOL
  • John Hopkins Bayview medical center studied 77
    patients with RA.
  • Spirituality was associated with happiness and
    positive health perceptions, even when disease
    was progressing. Arthritis Care and Research,
    vol., 49, 6, 778-783
  • Results suggest having a spiritual orientation
    may facilitate emotional adjustment and
    resilience in people with chronic illness.
  • Find meaning in their illness.
  • They experience more positive feelings.
  • They attend to positive elements in their lives.
  • Cassie Gaines, John Hopkins Bayview
    Medical Center

21
Journal of the American Medical Association
  • Relationships between mental health and strong
    faith, devout prayer, and religious
    socialization, may have consequences that are far
    reaching an perhaps greatly underestimated.
    Religious involvement is associated with
  • attendance at scheduled medical appt.
  • Greater cooperativeness
  • Better compliance
  • Improved medical outcomes
  • Koenig, H.G.,M.D.
  • JAMA. Vol.288

22
Controversy?
  • believes there is no role for spiritual
    assessment tools by a physician
  • debunks the view that religion is good for your
    health and demonstrates how attempts to link
    religion and medicine actually can cause harm
  • while he does not dispute the fact that religion
    can bring a sense of comfort in times of
    difficulty
  • Richard Sloan, Ph.D. Blind Faith, The Unholy
    Alliance of Religion and Medicine

23
How is spirituality defined?
  • Until recently spirituality and religion were
    used interchangeably.
  • The word spirituality is derived from the Latin
    word spiritus which refers to breath, air, wind.
  • The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) defines
    Spirit as that which animates the body the soul,
    the agent of vital conscious function.

24
A different way to define spirituality
  • Spirituality is an indicator of the human
    capacity for transcendence, it is defined in
    personal views and behaviors that express a sense
    of relatedness to a transcendent dimension or to
    something greater than self.
  • Victor Fankl, The Will to Meaning

25
Most important!!
  • It does not matter how the OED or Webster defines
    spirituality
  • What matters is that we have an awareness that
    spirituality is more
  • individualistic.
  • That we honor whatever it is that connects one
    to the spiritual

26
So there are BIG questions?Big questions filled
with uncertainty
  • Why me?
  • Why me, God?
  • What is the meaning of life?
  • Uncertainty-this will affect how a person
    responds spiritually to a new diagnosis
  • and to the challenge of living with chronic
    illness.

27
  • The uncertainty may challenge what was once a
    healthy spirituality
  • The uncertainty may deepen ones spirituality
  • Or some people may come to spirituality for the
    first time in their lives in a quest for answers.
  • Spirituality may be how they make sense of this
    new situation.

28
What are spiritual needs?How can we fulfill
these needs?
  • Spiritual needs encompass 4 areas
  • The need for love and relatedness
  • The need for meaning and purpose
  • The need for forgiveness
  • The need for hope
  • Shelly, J.A. S.Fish, Spiritual Care, 1988

29
The need for love and relatedness
  • At the time when patients feel the most need for
    relatedness they may feel isolated and alienated.
  • the best tool is therapeutic use of self or the
    ministry of presence.
  • Jan Pettigrew , PhD, R.N.
  • Critical Care Nursing Clinics Of North
    America. Sept, 1990, vol.2 no.3, p.503-508

30
The need for meaning and purpose
  • Identify those areas in your lives that trigger a
    sense of the spirit.
  • Utilize spiritual disciplines.
  • Awaken the Sacred in every day life
  • Prayer, meditation, mindfulness, visualization,
    church services, inspirational readings,mantras,
    music, painting, journaling, jokes and laughter
  • A simple question,
  • What makes you feel secure, energized, connected?

31
The need for forgiveness
  • One becomes introspective.
  • Vulnerability exists.
  • The response is often life review.
  • Old hurts can way heavily on individual.
  • Adding to the possible suffering.
  • Forgiveness of self and of others can bring
    relief and serenity.

32
What else can help?
  • Reflection, possibly journal writing.
  • Family should support loved ones in their inner
    reflection.
  • Dialogue
  • Support one another through dialogue

33
The need for hope
  • Studies have shown that people who have a
    developed spiritual discipline remain hopeful
    even when faced with adversity.
  • What does remaining hopeful mean?
  • OED-Hopeto get what one wishes for
  • OED-archaic definition-to trust or rely upon

34
hopefulness facilitates healing even amid chronic
illness.
  • Hope comes in many forms
  • Hope for cure
  • Hope for healing
  • Hope for comfort
  • Hope for meaningful relationships
  • Hope to live fully,come what may.
  • Birx, Ellen, PhD, RN,
  • Journal of Holistic Nursing, March 2006,
    vol., 24, 1, p.36

35
How does one remain hopefulachieve
peace/serenity, joy
  • People with chronic illness may not have much
    control over their external environment, but they
    can take charge of their inner environment
  • Identify those aspects of their lives which
    trigger a sense of the spirit and in turn fuels
    their inner self.

36
Living in the NOW!
  • People with chronic illness often speak of
    present moment living as a spiritual practice.
  • In the moment the fear of uncertainty dissipates
  • Life is full, in the now.

37
We as a community can help our patients to
preserve their spirit, honor their selves.
  • Each encounter is an honor.
  • Courage to engage in difficult conversation, this
    is our obligation.
  • We may be the bridge to love and relatedness,
    meaning and purpose, forgiveness and hope.
  • Be available for the experience!

38
  • Gretchen May-Fendo M.Div.,RRT,AE-C
  • Outpatient Pulmonary Coordinator
  • Bridgeport Hospital, Bridgeport, CT
  • Phone 203-336-7375 fax 203-330-7440
  • mgmayf_at_bpthosp.org
  • Reiki Master-Norma Pfriem Cancer Center
  • Private Office number 203-993-4582
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