Training Healthcare Chaplains: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow

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Abstract

This article invites theological school educators, clinical pastoral education educators, representatives of the professional healthcare chaplaincy organizations, and social scientists to begin a shared conversation about chaplaincy education. To date, we find that theological educators, clinical educators, professional chaplains, and the healthcare organizations where they work are not operating from or educating toward a common understanding of what makes healthcare chaplains effective. Before we identify five key questions that might help us be in shared conversation and move towards educating the most effective chaplains, we briefly describe the history of education for healthcare chaplaincy. We then describe what we learned in interviews in 2018 with 21 theological and 19 clinical educators who are educating healthcare chaplains in theological schools and clinical pastoral education residency programs, year-long educational programs in hospitals and other settings that focus on preparing people for staff chaplain jobs. Their different approaches and frames inform the five questions with which we conclude.

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APA

Cadge, W., Fitchett, G., Haythorn, T., Palmer, P. K., Rambo, S., Clevenger, C., & Stroud, I. E. (2019). Training Healthcare Chaplains: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. Journal of Pastoral Care and Counseling, 73(4), 211–221. https://doi.org/10.1177/1542305019875819

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