Hospitals
can save big bucks by putting chaplains on their health
care teams. Surprised? Hospitals are beginning to recognize
that spiritual well-being can be crucial to the healing
process. The Rev. George Frank, director of pastoral
care at Victory Memorial Hospital in Waukegan, Illinois,
says, "I don't think you can separate the physical from
the emotional and spiritual. People are whole people.
You can't treat the body without there being a spiritual
or emotional impact."
I
know that the skeptic might not agree with this idea
philosophically, but I'm not talking about philosophy;
I'm talking about facts. From 1991 to 1993, Dr. Elizabeth
McSherry studied 700 coronary patients admitted to the
Brockton/West Roxbury (Virginia) Center.
The
group studied received some of the most costly and complicated
procedures available such as bypass operations, valve
replacements and open heart surgery. Also included in
the study were veterans undergoing care for heart attacks
and chronic heart disease. One group of patients had
daily visits by a chaplain. The other group of patients
saw a chaplain an average of three minutes during their
entire hospital stay. The study found that patients
who had the most contact with the chaplains were released
from the hospital an average of two days sooner than
patients who did not receive regular visits. Dr. McSherry
estimates that the cost of the chaplain visits was no
more than $100 per patient. The savings, however, from
letting a patient go home earlier amounted to as much
as $4,000 a day. The group visited by chaplains also
had fewer complications after surgery.
Sounds
like a logical way to cut our health care costs dramatically.
That approach might even be a good idea for all phases
of our lives.
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