Talk:Healthcare chaplaincy

Latest comment: 6 years ago by Joshua Jonathan in topic Health care and spirituality

Copy-vio's edit

This stub is lifted word-by-word from it's only source, Puchalski, C. M.; Blatt, B.; Kogan, M.; Butler, A. (2014), "Spirituality and health: the development of a field", Academic Medicine, 89(1), 10-16:

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Spirituality has been foundational in health care for centuries, but it became overshadowed by early 20th-century technological advances in diagnosis and treatment.

Puchalski et al:

Spirituality has been foundational in health care for centuries but became overshadowed by early 20th-century technological advances in diagnosis and treatment.


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The scientific focus moved the culture of medicine away from a holistic, service-oriented model to a technological, reductionist model.

Puchalski et al:

the scientific focus moved the culture of medicine away from a holistic, service-oriented model to a technological, eductionist model.


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The alignment between spirituality and health is centuries old, as evidenced both by the healing roles of shamans and priests and by the history of hospitals, whose genesis was through religious organizations that emphasized health, healing, and the whole person. In 1910, the Flexner Report, which set the stage for much of 20th-century medical education, gave medical education a much-needed grounding in science. A regrettable consequence of this scientific grounding was that it altered the alignment between spirituality and health, resulting in the downplaying of the humanistic and spiritual elements of patient care.

Puchalski et al:

The alignment between spirituality and health is centuries old, as evidenced both by the healing roles of shamans and priests and by the history of hospitals, whose genesis was through religious organizations that emphasized health, healing, and the whole person. In 1910, the Flexner Report,3 which set the stage for much of 20th-century medical education, gave medical education a much-needed grounding in science. A regrettable consequence of this scientifi grounding was that it altered the alignment between spirituality and health, resulting in the downplaying of the humanistic and spiritual elements of patient care.

See WP:COPYVIO. Joshua Jonathan -Let's talk! 16:47, 12 December 2017 (UTC)Reply

Contested deletion edit

This page should not be speedy deleted as an unambiguous copyright infringement, because all of the content is original writing from a class assignment (see note on talk page) content was developed collaboratively offline and used to create this new page. Richardjames444 (talk) 18:21, 12 December 2017 (UTC)Reply

Contested material has been removed. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Richardjames444 (talkcontribs) 19:34, 12 December 2017 (UTC)Reply
And new ones have been added by Richardjames444:
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By the late 20th century, research and the public’s outcry against the lack of holistic approaches to care, called for the resurgence of research in spirituality and health supported spirituality’s potential effect on health.

Puchalski et al. (2014):

This research, along with the public’s outcry against the lack of holistic approaches to care [...] By the late 20th century, a resurgence of research in spirituality and health supported spirituality’s potential effect on health.

That's just line 1. The original copy-vio's are from your students, but this is the third time you re-insert or copy their copy-vio's. Joshua Jonathan -Let's talk! 07:09, 13 December 2017 (UTC)Reply

Health care and spirituality edit

Most of this article is about the beneficial effects of spirituality on coping with and healing illness. But that topic has already been coverd at Spirituality#Health and well-being. Nothing about how spirituality isbeing used in health care. Joshua Jonathan -Let's talk! 08:56, 13 December 2017 (UTC)Reply