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Paediatric Chaplaincy Network Meeting

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Paediatric Chaplaincy Network Meeting Spiritual Care for Sick Children and young people: Good practice in relating to children and young people – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Paediatric Chaplaincy Network Meeting


1
Paediatric Chaplaincy Network Meeting
  • Spiritual Care for Sick Children and young
    people Good practice in relating to children
    and young people

2
Paediatric Chaplaincy Network Meeting
  • The spiritual needs of sick children and
    adolescents in a paediatric hospital context
    outcomes and reflections from a participation
    project
  • Revd Paul Nash, Revd Kathryn Darby, Dr Sally
    NashChaplaincy, Birmingham Childrens Hospital,
    Steelhouse Lane, Birmingham, B4
    6NH.paul.nash_at_bch.nhs.uk, kathryn.darby_at_bch.nhs.
    uk, s.nash_at_stjohns-nottm.ac.uk.Birmingham
    Childrens Hospital and Midlands Centre for Youth
    Ministry.

3
Paediatric Chaplaincy Network Meeting
  • Birmingham Childrens Hospital
  • 260 beds
  • 2,500 staff
  • located in the centre of Great Britains second
    largest city
  • Birmingham population 2008 - 1.02 million
  • 22 are 0-15 years olds(higher than national
    average)
  • multi-faith, multi-cultural context

4
BCH Participation Project
  • many of your orgs with have them
  • different to research, less regularised but same
    good principles consent, open environ.
  • inductive and deductive
  • pilot resources / ideas
  • Context whole family whole org.
  • How 1-1, small groups
  • Where School, wards, clubs, play centre,
    patient participation groups
  • Write up as case studies and triangulate to each
    other and spirituality theory
  • Try ideas with well CYP groups
  • Ideas we started with
  • Art, music, beads
  • Journal / scrap book
  • Play / Godly Play
  • Stories
  • Pictures
  • Blobbys
  • Activities
  • Pets as therapy
  • Remember a time when.
  • Parents questionnaire
  • Staff questionnaire
  • List is endless

5
Paediatric Chaplaincy Network Meeting
  • An Action Research Project
  • staff, children and young people work together
    to improve spiritual and religious care
  • core activities are reflection, research and
    action and outcome is improved practice
  • project approved by the relevant hospital
    authorities
  • briefing session for staff and volunteers
    developed a feedback form
  • voluntary informed ongoing consent
  • activities took place in an open environment and
    the parent was present if the child wanted this
  • a convenience sample was used consisting of 12
    encounters.

6
Our 6 Ps
  • Places
  • Parents
  • Patient issues
  • Participation activities
  • Principles and practices
  • Products

7
Participation activities
  • sought to facilitate ways into the inner world,
    to explore and understand the spiritual self.
  • range of resources to use were developed by the
    team
  • team used activities that built on their own
    strengths and interests where appropriate

8
Principles and practices of spiritual care
for sick children
  • Create spaces for spiritual care to occur and
    relationships to develop
  • 2) Empowerment is a core underpinning value of
    spiritual care
  • 3) Offering episodes of spiritual care
    reflects the often integrated nature of
    assessment and intervention and the element of
    reciprocity
  • 4) Developmental and learning context is
    important to understand in choosing activities,
    resources and language
  • 5) Identity may have a heightened significance
    in sickness
  • 6) We need to connect and build on existing
    spirituality and if appropriate faith
  • 7) Meaning making helps children and young
    people articulate, identify and understand their
    spiritual needs
  • 8) Spiritual care occurs within and by a
    community and can offer windows of normalization
  • 9) Metaphor is a significant tool for spiritual
    care
  • 10) Concrete and visible expressions and
    reminders of spiritual care are important

9
Principles and practices of spiritual care
for sick children
  • Create spaces for spiritual care to occur and
    relationships to develop
  • attitude of openness and acceptance
  • attentive listening, rapport, trust, acceptance
  • offering choice, autonomy and gaining consent
  • involves a relationship with the patient and
    often their family

10
Joes postcard
11
Joe remembers
12
Principles and practices of spiritual care
for sick children
  • 2) Empowerment is a core underpinning value of
    spiritual care
  • best practice in spiritual care is empowering
    patients to choose, ask, understand and express
  • keep checking that they still want to continue.

13
Teddys stay in hospital
14
Principles and practices of spiritual care
for sick children
  • 3) Offering episodes of spiritual care
  • reflects the often integrated nature of
    assessment and intervention and the element of
    reciprocity

15
Principles and practices of spiritual care
for sick children
  • 4) Developmental and learning context is
    important to understand in choosing activities,
    resources and language
  • sickness may cause a developmental issues
    disability
  • potential issues around literacy, language and
    cultural and religious beliefs.

16
I can make it too
17
Principles and practices of spiritual care
for sick children
  • 5) Identity may have a heightened significance in
    sickness
  • identity is significant in spiritual care
  • affirming a positive identity for a child
  • names are highly important
  • the vicarious patient.
  • engaging with the whole family

18
Principles and practices of spiritual care
for sick children
  • 6) We need to connect and build on existing
    spirituality and if appropriate faith
  • for some spiritual care is more meaningful if
    religious care
  • think what lifts the spirits of the patient and
    build on this
  • prayer may be an integral element of this
    connecting
  • consider giving space for children to pray too

19
Principles and practices of spiritual care
for sick children
  • 7) Meaning making helps children and young people
    articulate, identify and understand their
    spiritual needs
  • show and tell
  • building on what has gone before
  • mark significant moments
  • use mapping or reflection exercises
  • avoid loading the child with our expectations and
    assumptions

20
There is always someone listening.
21
Jules prayer
  • thank you for all the children that are laid
    now in this hospital today. Make them better
    also those going through worse, and for those
    whos getting out. Thank you Lord for everything
    you did for them. Make them to thank you. Then
    show them that you exist. Show them that You are
    there for them, that Youre their Father. Thank
    you for everything that You did from when I come
    in till the last day I go away. Thank you, very,
    very much. Amen.

22
Principles and practices of spiritual care
for sick children
  • 8) Spiritual care occurs within and by a
    community and can offer windows of normalization
  • community is a significant concept in spiritual
    care
  • hospital is a new community
  • finding opportunities for patients to be
    together
  • windows of normalization.
  • children care about other children and can be
    impacted emotionally by them

23
Making friends
24
Principles and practices of spiritual care
for sick children
  • 9) Metaphor is a significant tool for spiritual
    care
  • examples from the project include using a
    butterfly image, the story of the lost sheep,
    blob pictures.
  • metaphors have the potential to nurture the child
    in the longer term

25
Stories
26
Principles and practices of spiritual care
for sick children
  • 10) Concrete and visible expressions and
    reminders of spiritual care are important
  • reminders facilitate ongoing
    reflection
  • such reminders can be given purposefully
    or left for children to find
    themselves
  • we leave behind who we are

27
Products
  • most helpful was focused activity
  • useful products include
  • art and craft materials
  • visual stimuli
  • age and developmental stage appropriate books
    and stories
  • godly play resources
  • songs and musical instruments
  • toys that can be used in bed
  • things that relate to helpful metaphors

28
ISE Interpretive Spiritual Encounters
  • interpretive spiritual care encounters are core
    activities first step in spiritual care plan
  • in paediatrics a standard list of questions is
    not usually appropriate for assessment

29
Conclusions
  • changes occurred in both patient and
    practitioner experience
  • there was a sense of energy and enthusiasm,
    discovery and surprise within the team indicating
    a shift in awareness and practice
  • bringing resources to the bedside leads to a
    more child-centred and child-directed contact
  • the intended outcome is a change in
    multi-disciplinary practice 
  •  
  •  
  •  

30
Ongoing Developments
  • 2 more days in 2012 trial more resources with
    other paediatric chaplains etc joining us
  • Multi disciplinary meeting (psychology, Play,
    Youth Work, Nursing and Chaplaincy) to discuss
    what is distinctive and crossover in our roles
    and professions in offering spiritual care (Sept
    12 Feb 13)
  • Explore wider trialling with the Paediatric
    Chaplaincy Network (GBI) from Nov 12
  • Integration into daily care offered by BCH
    Chaplaincy
  • Triangulate findings with teenage oncology
    research in the same subject
  • More participation days in 2013
  • Publication and wider distribution 2013 onwards
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