Positive Spirituality in Health Care
Wholeness for Clinicians, Patients, and
Health Care Organizations
Positive Spirituality in Health Care
Nine Practical Approaches to Pursuing
Wholeness for Clinicians, Patients, and
Health Care Organizations
Frederic C. Craigie, Jr., PhD
Maine-Dartmouth Family Medicine Residency, Dartmouth Medical School,
and Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine,
University of Arizona College of Medicine
M i l l C i t y P r e s s
M i n n e a p o l i s , M N
Copyright © 2010 by Frederic C. Craigie, Jr., PhD.
Mill City Press, Inc. 212 3rd Avenue North, Suite 290 Minneapolis, MN 55401 612.455.2294 www.millcitypublishing.com
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the author.
ISBN – 978-1-936107-48-3 ISBN – 1-936107-48-1
Cover Design by Wes Moore Typeset by James Arneson
Cover art © 2008 Caren Loebel-Fried www.carenloebelfried.com
Printed in the United States of America
To Heather, Matthew, and Tom Craigie. The spirit and commitments of your lives inspire me
and make the world a better place.
Index of Strategies……………………………………………….. xi
Acknowledgments………………………………………………. xiii
Foreword………………………………………………………….. xvii
Introduction…………………………………………………………. 1
The Context
1. Perspectives on Spirituality……………………………… 17
• Defining spirituality • So what, then, is spirituality? • Dimensions of spirituality • Suffering
2. Why Spirituality Matters………………………………… 53
• Spirituality is intimately related to health, wholeness, and well-being
• Spirituality mediates choices in health behaviors • Spirituality often frames the ways that people
cope with adversity and pursue the journey toward wellness/wholeness
• Spirituality is important because people want to be known in this way by their caregivers
Contents
3. Who Provides Spiritual Care?…………………………. 85 • Patient and clinician perspectives on spiritual care • Contributions to spiritual care by providers
of health and wellness care
4. Three Arenas of Spiritual Care……………………….. 97 • The personal arena • The clinical arena • The organizational arena • Three interlocking pieces
Nine Practical Approaches to Bringing Positive Spirituality into Health
and Wellness Care
Personal: Connections with What Matters to You
5. Stay connected with your purpose………………….. 123 • Spiritual aliveness • Aliveness and purpose • Staying connected with purpose
6. The moments of your life: Cultivate qualities of character…………………………………………………..145 • Positive Psychology • Discovering qualities of character • Working with qualities of character
7. Ground yourself in healing intention and presence….. 163 • Intention and presence • Cultivating intention and presence
Clinical: Connections with What Matters to Your Patients
8. Pick one or two areas to inquire about people’s spirituality……………………………………….. 189
• Two types of spiritual inquiry • Practical clinical approaches to spiritual inquiry • When in the course of human events
9. Partner with patients in pursuing what they care about……………………………………………………. 217
• A template for collaborative spiritual care conversations • Goals: What matters to you and where do you want to go? • Approaches: How are you going to get there? • Next steps
10. Be attuned to recurring themes of transcendence and valued directions……………………………………. .263
• Transcendence and valued directions • Spiritual care toward transcendence and valued directions • Approaches to transcendence • Encouraging patients in valued directions
Organizational: Connecting with the Shared Energy of People Working Together
11. Honor organizational mission and values………… 313
• Mission and values • Developing an understanding of mission and values • Mission and values as part of organizational life • Organizational specialists
12. Cultivate community………………………………………331 • Community in health care organizations • Positive qualities of community in health care
organizations • Cultivating community
13. Exercise empowering leadership……………………… 347
• Leadership and spiritual care • Windows on health care leadership: Voices of clinicians • Qualities of spirited health care leadership • Becoming a leader
Afterword………………………………………………………… 370
Appendix I: A Dozen of Fred’s Favorite Spirituality and Health Websites………………………… 372
Appendix II: A Fiddler’s Dozen of Fred’s Favorite Books on Spirituality and Health Care………………… 376
About the Author……………………………………………… 381
Index……………………………………………………………….. 383
Index of Strategies
1: Find your personal statements 136 2: Write your own origin story 137 3: Create a statement of personal mission 141 4: Describe your own approach to present awareness 143 5: Identify your own signature strengths of character 156 6: Nurture your own character 161 7: Be well 177 8: Pursue a practice of re-focusing and renewal during the day 179 9: Create a personal affirmation 181 10: Use conversational templates for spiritual inquiry 198 11: Identify conversation-openers 206 12: Adapt spiritual inquiry to the circumstances where
you see people 214 13: Get patients talking about what they care about 237 14: Elicit patients’ wisdom and competence 250 15: Express your own wisdom in some new ways 255 16: Collaborate with patients in defining next steps 259 17: Experiment with one or two approaches to transcendence 301 18: Invite patients to define key role values 305 19: Talk about the mission 323 20: Keep talking and develop a wider view of mission
and values 327 21: Define positive qualities of workplace community 340 22: Choose some next steps in building goodness in your
workplace community, and bring a colleague into the conversation 345
23: Be guided by your own evolving definition of leadership for spiritual care 363
24: Pick one or two points of growth for yourself as a leader with soul 367
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