TY - JOUR
T1 - What organizational and business models underlie the provision of spiritual care in healthcare organizations? An initial description and analysis
AU - Antoine, Aja
AU - Fitchett, George
AU - Marin, Deborah
AU - Sharma, Vanshdeep
AU - Garman, Andrew
AU - Haythorn, Trace
AU - White, Kelsey
AU - Greene, Amy
AU - Cadge, Wendy
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Two-thirds of American hospitals have chaplains. This article explores the organizational and business models that underlie how chaplains are integrated into hospitals. Based on interviews with 14 chaplain managers and the 11 healthcare executives to whom they report at 18 hospitals in 9 systems, we identify three central findings. First, there is significant variation in how spiritual care programs are staffed and integrated into their hospitals. Second, executives and chaplain managers see the value of chaplains in terms of their quality of care, reliability and responsivity to emergent patient and staff needs, and clinical training and experience working within a complex environment. Third, few departments rely on empirical data when making decisions about staffing, tending instead to default to the budgetary status quo. These findings provide the basis for a larger more systematic study.
AB - Two-thirds of American hospitals have chaplains. This article explores the organizational and business models that underlie how chaplains are integrated into hospitals. Based on interviews with 14 chaplain managers and the 11 healthcare executives to whom they report at 18 hospitals in 9 systems, we identify three central findings. First, there is significant variation in how spiritual care programs are staffed and integrated into their hospitals. Second, executives and chaplain managers see the value of chaplains in terms of their quality of care, reliability and responsivity to emergent patient and staff needs, and clinical training and experience working within a complex environment. Third, few departments rely on empirical data when making decisions about staffing, tending instead to default to the budgetary status quo. These findings provide the basis for a larger more systematic study.
KW - Business models
KW - chaplains
KW - executives
KW - healthcare organizations
KW - spiritual care
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85098601964
U2 - 10.1080/08854726.2020.1861535
DO - 10.1080/08854726.2020.1861535
M3 - Article
C2 - 33369548
AN - SCOPUS:85098601964
SN - 0885-4726
VL - 28
SP - 272
EP - 284
JO - Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
JF - Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy
IS - 2
ER -