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here
was a time when physical health and spiritual health weren't considered
separately, and nuns and monks, deacons and deaconesses, ministered
to both. Somewhere along the way, science split off and the medical
profession saw its role purely in physical terms.
Hardly a month goes by now without an article about a new study
on the power of prayer in healing or the benefits of mind, body,
spirit integration for wellness. Some might call it new-age hooey,
but others are calling it a return to an ancient truth.
"
We're going back to something that was going on a long time ago," says
Cleo Bell, one of last August's first four graduates of Duke's
Parish Nurse Certificate Program, who now uses her skills at her
church in the Walltown community of Durham.
"
I had retired from a thirty-one-year nursing career at the VA Hospital," says
Bell. "I hadn't planned to work at all, but then I heard about
this program, and I felt I was being called. The people needed
me and God was sending me into service. Now I give workshops on
health issues, like arthritis and blood pressure and diabetes,
both in my church and in my community."
The sense of being called is not unusual for students in the Health
and Nursing Ministries program, a joint School of Nursing-Divinity
School venture begun in the fall of 2000, which allows students
to earn a certificate in parish nursing or one of several master's
degrees combining nursing and ministry.
"
I felt divinely guided to this program," says Karanne Campbell,
who is pursuing dual master's degrees--one in church ministries
and one in science in nursing. "I was living in Asheville
and working as a home-health nurse in hospice situations with people
facing the end of their lives. That is a time when people evaluate
and ask the hard questions, like, 'What has my life meant?' or
'Why did I get this disease?'
"
It was a time when healing still needed to take place, even when
there was no hope of curing. I had recognized the strong connection
of mind, body, and spirit, and I knew I needed to be grounded in
my own faith. My faith had to be intact for me to give the kind
of care that I saw was needed. I felt called to give spiritual
care, but I didn't have the skills or the theological education.
I wanted to make sure I was doing everything I could and nothing
I shouldn't. Through my pastoral-care training, I'm gaining confidence."
The Health and Ministries program is part of a growing trend. In
fact, parish ministry is the fastest-growing subset in nursing
education today. Because being compassionately present to the sick
and the suffering through the ministries of caring and healing
has been a central part of Jewish, Christian, and other religious
traditions, nurses in the program are well grounded in theology.
Christian students can study Christian tradition through the divinity-school
curriculum at Duke, or Jewish students can pursue academic programs
in the religion department. Duke's program is more in depth than
many programs that provide only certificate-level study.
"
I left my practice as a nurse practitioner in cardiology," says
Alyson Breisch, administrative director for the Health and Nursing
Ministries program and a student in the post-master's certificate
in health and nursing ministries. "But now I'm doing my clinical
work as a volunteer at my church, so you might say I'm still working
at the heart of the matter. I saw the 'real issues' families face
while I was working in critical-care settings, and I wanted to
be able to pay attention to the spiritual component in care-giving.
The theological base has helped me be more holistic."
Jennifer Johnson is a part-time student in the program. She spends
the other part of her time as a nurse manager in the adult general
medicine unit at Duke Medical Center. She says she finds that her
blossoming pastoral skills are as useful in caring for the caregivers
as for patients. "As I develop my active listening skills,
I find that I am being consulted by staff who might be having personal
issues or issues with difficult patients."
Johnson has found that changing from the nursing mindset to the
theological one can be challenging. "I come from nursing,
where it's about data and actions and outcomes," she says. "There
are less solid outcomes in theology; I've had to learn to think
differently. But isn't it wonderful that I can incorporate all
my skills and my beliefs together into one profession?"
--Miriam Sauls
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