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1
Professional Chaplains and Health Care Quality
Improvement:Tales of a Research Project
Nancy Berlinger, Ph.D., M.DivThe Hastings Center
Themes in Pastoral TheologyFebruary 5, 2009
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Overview
Research project on chaplaincy and quality
Core Values Three roles of the chaplain Patient Satisfaction and QI projects Recommendations
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Who We Are
George Fitchett, D.Min., Ph.D. Kathryn Lyndes, Ph.D. Clayton Thomason, J.D., M.Div. Martha Jacobs, D.Min., M.Div. Nancy Berlinger, Ph.D., M.Div.
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Research Project on Chaplains and Quality
Aim: To develop preliminary information about
healthcare chaplains’ views about, and experiences with, quality and quality improvement in spiritual care.
Sponsors: The Hastings Center The HealthCare Chaplaincy
Funding: The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations
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Focus Group Location Number PercentSan Francisco 11 28%Gilbert, AZ 10 26%Chicago 9 23%New York City 9 23%
Four Focus Groups
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Please describe any experience you have had as a chaplain with a quality improvement (QI) project in your department or your institution/agency.
Please tell us your view of two indicators or components of high quality spiritual care. Or, if you prefer, of low quality spiritual care.
If you had the authority, what one or two things would you do to improve the quality of spiritual care in your department?
Focus Group Questions
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Methods
Transcribed audio recordings of the groups
Each member of research team extracted key themes from transcripts
Team discussed these themes until we reached a consensus
Selected quotes to illustrate each theme
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Table 1. Focus Group Participants
Characteristic Groups Number PercentAge (average, range)
Sex male 22 56%female 17 44%
Race White 27 69%Black 8 21%Asian 2 5%Hispanic 2 5%
Faith Group Roman Catholic 12 31%Mainline Protestant 12 31%Conservative Protestant 11 28%Jewish 2 5%Buddhist 1 3%Orthodox Christian 1 3%
52 years (30 - 65)
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Table 2. Participants’ Professional Background
Characteristic Groups Number Percent*Role in Department manager (department or system) 23 62%
staff chaplain 14 36%
Years as Healthcare Chaplain (average, SD, range)
Board Certified Chaplain APC 19 49%NACC 9 23%NAJC 1 3%No 10 26%
Other Certification ACPE Supervisor 9 23%HCMA Chaplain** 3 8%Other*** 4 10%
*May not sum to 100% due to missing cases.**HCMA = Healthcare Chaplains Ministry Association***Other certification includes: substance abuse counselor, licensed professional counselor, RN, and other.
13 years (SD +7, range 2 - 33)
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Characteristic Groups Number PercentWorkplace hospital 31 82%
other healthcare 7 18%
Ownership Type not for profit 24 62%faith based 10 26%government 4 10%for profit 1 3%
Table 3. Participants’ Workplace
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Chaplains’ Core Values Chaplains have a very strong
commitment to providing quality spiritual care.
Quality was described in relation to chaplains’ roles Caring for patient, family, and staff Creating space for healing Providing holistic care Offering presence Demonstrating competency
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There are strong similarities between chaplains’ core values and the values of patient-centered care, including:
• the biopsychosocial model • viewing patient as a person• sharing power and responsibility• building effective relationships
Chaplains’ Core Values and Patient Centered Care
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Measuring Core Values
The Tension: Measurement is Impossible but Necessary
Skeptical and resistant to quantifying values
Open to the possibility of improving performance based on measures
Realize the administrative need to measure Want to find meaningful measures of their
work
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• “Is quality spiritual care really measurable? Most of us work in institutions where the answer has to be yes in order to survive. But in the end, it’s a qualitative measure, not a quantitative measure, I think.”
“And our job [as managers of pastoral care departments] is to come as close [as possible] to finding something that's measurable that actually makes a difference in what we do. And to me, it's up hill all the way.”
“They want those numbers, and we have to bow to those numbers…But we also have to really answer to God and to our calling as chaplains.”
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What Gets Counted?
Concrete markers of quality in spiritual care: Initial visits Chart notes Referrals Board certification Staff retention
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What Gets Counted?
“… it was basically measuring how many people got visited.”
“We did a quality improvement project on charting because our goal is to have 85% of the patients charted on by the spiritual care people.”
“Tracking referrals is one way of measuring what, really I think shows quality in terms of who’s referring, who’s not.”
“Two markers I would add would be staff retention and certification.”
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“I was struggling with the quality issue too, of how do we define it. What is it? Is it patient satisfaction? Is it perception of value? And who’s doing that perception?”
Patient Satisfaction
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Tension: Patient Satisfaction Surveys are “useless” yet
“rough indicators” of quality Pro
Only patients can tell us when their spiritual needs have been met
Surveys are the voice of the patients
Departmental surveys may better capture service provision
Con Patients don’t always
recognize what spiritual care is
Patients and families may be poor judges of quality
Surveys don’t measure all dimensions of spiritual care
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“And even though we identify ourselves, every time we walk into the room. . . they don’t recognize the fact that this is the chaplain. It’s just this nice lady that came in and talked to me for a little while. They don’t see that as spiritual care, when in fact it was!”
“The truest measure of quality is the people we want to serve. . . And so we get their perspective.”
Patient Satisfaction
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“It's a requirement for all departments to do a quality improvement project each year. It's usually not well received by my chaplains. They basically hate it, because it's very hard to quantify what we do.”
Departmental & Institutional
QI Projects
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The Tension: Requirement vs Opportunity
Pro = a range of views QI projects provide
minimal benefit QI projects provide
opportunities for meaningful change
QI projects provide regular review of professional goals
Con QI projects do
little or nothing to improve quality
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Chaplains have a range of experience with QI
Some chaplains have no experience with QI
Other chaplains work in institutions with highly developed QI programs and have received advanced training in QI (eg. Six Sigma greenbelts).
Chaplains’ Experiences with QI Projects
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“…We used to use a…CPE model of presenting case studies… on a rotating basis among the staff, and talking about our particular encounters with patients. And [the] quality goal was very specific,…what did the presenter, the chaplain learn about himself or herself that increased their value as a chaplain and their ability to do pastoral care.… [It] spoke, I think, to the heart of our work, although presenting [cases]… is very challenging, very difficult.”
Department/Institutional Projects
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Managing Quality in Spiritual Care
Most managers of chaplaincy departments can describe efforts to improve the services provided by their department.
Few department managers think of these projects in QI terms.
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“We have to think creatively. There are things we can do. We can't see every patient, but we can make sure that there's a brochure [about chaplaincy services] in every patient's packet.”
“I carry a pocket card. They're in a goldenrod color. You just can't miss them. It's just a protocol of when to call the chaplain, and who's available.…So…every time…when I'm with [a nurse] who's new [I give them a card, saying], ‘This is when you call the chaplain’.”
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Institutional Chaplaincy: The Chaplains’ Three Roles
Chaplain as Shepherd Bedside care of patients and families
Chaplain as AdministratorInstitutional insider, shaping mission
and culture
Chaplain as ProphetInstitutional critic
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Chaplain as Shepherd
“We skillfully facilitate an openness for persons to explore their spirituality, and particularly in regards to the crisis that they are facing in the moment, paying attention with listening skills and intervention techniques.”
“…We're not here to preach…We're here to travel with you, in your health care situation.”
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Chaplain as Administrator
“My ministry is not just to the patients. My ministry is to the family members, to the staff, to administration, to people from the community coming into the hospital.”
“You know, [the Saintliness Healthcare System] has a mission statement.… I think finding our role in the mission statement is also very helpful.… A positive way of asserting the role of chaplains, I think, is building on a mission statement.”
“The ideal for what a hospital should be as a healing environment.”
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Chaplain as Prophet
“Patients were treated as the appendectomy or the heart patient, and they were just sort of a machine that needed to be fixed. My goal… is to teach… the staff that spirituality is treating the whole person, the mind, body and spirit.”
“I was thinking about wasting time with someone.… [Patients tell us] thanks for spending the time, you spend a lot of time with me [and] it's almost an ‘I'm not worthy for this’.”
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Chaplains’ Diverse Roles and QI
It may be helpful to keep these three different roles in mind as we think about what the chaplains told us about the problems of measuring quality in spiritual care.
As we heard, finding ways to measure quality in the chaplains’ shepherding role with patients and families is a challenge.
However, because many models for QI focus on what happens in the clinician-patient encounter, it may be an even greater challenge to find ways to measure quality for the chaplains’ administrative and prophet functions.
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Recommendations
Telling Our Story, Again Setting the Standards Sharing Bright Ideas
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“I carry a pocket card. They're in a goldenrod color. You just can't miss them. It's just a protocol of when to call the chaplain, and who's available.…So it's just a little thing and every time…when I'm with somebody who's new [I give them a card, saying], ‘This is when you call the chaplain’."
“[A colleague] and I did a presentation to a palliative care conference.… And what we did was [role play] a verbatim.… We brought down the house, because, it was like they never…experienced a chaplain's visit before.… I think we're going to try and do that for the new employee orientation, or the nurses, or whatever. Just so that they understand what it is we do.”
Telling Our Story, Again
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Setting the Standards“I think it would be helpful…to have a conversation [with]
organizations like APC [to] come up with some suggested matrix in terms of like, ratios…Again, I keep going back to the standardized piece because again I’m trying to go along with the culture of the hospital, and all these other disciplines have these standardized practices.”
“We need researchers to help us [develop] targets so that we can break it down into bite-size pieces and get some kind of numbers and expectations that are reasonable and experiential and, and outcome-based and evidence-based and all of [those] buzz words that get thrown around in science today.”
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Sharing Bright Ideas
“…If [the chaplain] is staying with a patient because of either a trauma or around a very complicated death issue, it’s not just a visit, it’s a visit times this [weighting factor] so that it doesn’t look as though you, well you’ve only seen three people. You’re an inadequate chaplain if you’ve only seen three people, but the, but the formulary says they were three complicated deaths.”
“In October our institution stopped using Press Ganey.…We are moving into [another company], which has no provision [for satisfaction with spiritual care services] whatsoever. So in the absence of any standardized…thing, with [the help of a local researcher], we've developed our own patient satisfaction and staff satisfaction surveys as a check on our performance and to demonstrate what we do.”
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Conclusions: Living with a Paradox
Intrinsic Core Values: The intrinsic
value of quality patient, family, and staff care
The transcendent value of spiritual care as a profession and vocation
Extrinsic Values: The instrumental
value of quantitative & qualitative measures of quality to show the value of spiritual care
Translational value; in dialogue with administrators and other healthcare professionals
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Summary
While some chaplains voice skepticism about QI, there are leaders who are making creative efforts to develop and employ meaningful measures of quality in spiritual care.
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“To survive we have to come up with something measurable, because to certain people, that’s the only language they can speak. Our job is to come as close to finding something that’s measurable that actually makes a difference in what we do. To me, it’s up hill all the way.”
Summary