Buddhist Approaches to Dying and Hospice Care in Taiwan
Jonathan Watts (2018)
https://profrcchenmd.blogspot.com/2018/01/buddhist-approaches-to-dying-and.html
Buddhist Approaches to Dying and Hospice
Care in Taiwan
Jonathan Watts
A Public Symposium sponsored by The Dharma Drum Institute of Liberal Arts
in conjunction with
The International Network of Engaged
Buddhists (INEB) 18th General Conference
November 22, 2017
Dharma Drum Mountain Temple
繼續閱讀請點選下面這個數字 [27.10.24]
One of the outstanding examples of
Taiwanese Engaged Buddhism is the development of Buddhist based hospice care
and the training of ordained sangha members in psycho-spiritual care for
patients, family, and other caregivers. Such training mirrors older movements
found in Western Europe and the United States, such as Clinical Pastoral
Education (CPE), which come out of largely Christian cultural contexts. In
Asia, however, there has been a need for approaches to dying and hospice care
more suitable to Buddhist cultural contexts.
The symposium began in full with an introduction to the movement in Taiwan by its founder, the eminent Prof. Dr. Rong-chi Chen, Founder of Buddhist Lotus Hospice Care Foundation (BLHCF). Prof. Chen explained that the National Taiwan University Hospice (NTUH) and Palliative Care Unit was the first public unit established in Taiwan in 1995, after private hospices had been established at the Christian Mackay Memorial Hospital in Tamsui in 1990 and the Catholic Cardinal Tien’s Hospital in Hsindian in 1994. At this time, Prof. Chen was the Vice Superintendent of NTU hospital and had become aware of the need for Buddhist monastics to be involved in patient care. He explained, “Although spirituality doesn’t necessarily pertain to religion, if religious representatives can become fully involved, the spiritual care that they could provide would be much more effective.”[1] Prof. Chen also noted that Christian denominations have had specific training for chaplains to serve in hospitals and other places yet Buddhist groups have not. As 70-80% of Taiwanese are Buddhist, he and his colleagues thought it would be good to identify some enthusiastic monks and nuns to begin such training. The major obstacle they discovered, however, was that Buddhist monastics were not used to working in such intensive medical environments. Eventually, everyone in this first training group of candidates dropped out. From this experience, Prof. Chen and his colleagues realized they needed a systematic form of chaplain training. In the previous year, 1994, a group of people from Buddhist universities, both ordained and lay, created the Buddhist Lotus Hospice Care Foundation (BLHCF) to promote hospice and palliative care and Life & Death Education. Prof. Chen was serving as the President of the BLHCF and together they began a systematic plan for a full-fledged clinical Buddhist monastic, hospice training program. Beginning with just two graduates in the initial year of 1999, the numbers of trained monastics quickly grew to seventeen by 2002 and 29 by 2009. By 2017, the number had grown 63 graduates, including 2 Catholic nuns, with 32 now working as clinical monastics in 43 hospices and palliative care wards across the country, such as at Chungshan Medical University Hospital, Chinese Medical University Hospital, and Veterans General Hospital Taichung.
Respect medical teamwork and the need to
develop various clinical skills
Be capable of rendering care as a listener,
supporter, and provider of new ideas
Be enthusiastic and eager to serve people
as a life-death explorer
General Education on the meaning of hospice and palliative care
Shared Courses with clinical professionals
that communicates the definition and meaning of spiritual care
Professional Courses for only monastics
that covers key issues for working in hospice and palliative care environments
Clinical Internship in which the monastic
must be involved in one complete case.
After passing through these levels, they may proceed to clinical training in which the monastic participates in fuller practice as a member of the care team. Despite these challenges and new skills that must be learned, the role of religious professionals in a hospital can become an ordinary thing. Patients at the NTU Hospice will usually ask more from a religious professional than from a nurse or social worker, and 71% of patients will ask for spiritual care from monk or nun. With the support of a pool of lay volunteers, spiritual care can come in a wide variety of ways, such as cooking food that may include Chinese medicinal herbs, reading the patients books, helping to organize special events at the hospice like concerts and birthday parties, and assisting with special requests like facilitating a visit by a particular person or taking the patient on a final visit somewhere.
The last speaker was Ven. Tsung-Tueng, Director of the Great Compassion Institute with her assistant Ven. Zhihui, Lecturer at the Great Compassion Institute, who spoke on Community Hospice Care & Buddhist Monastics. Bhikkhuni Tsung-Teung was the first monastic to be trained in the CBC program, under the guidance of Dr. Ching-yu Chen, and held the position that Ven. Lok now has in training monastics at NTU Hospice. In 2014, she created the Great Compassion Institute to expand and compliment the work being done at NTU Hospital and other hospitals into local communities. The nations of East Asia, like Taiwan and Japan, are facing difficulties in their public health system as a huge proportion of their population is becoming elderly and dying at the same time. Community care systems are increasingly needed as overburdened hospitals cannot handle the overload of patients. Ven. Tsung-Tueng explained that their project seeks to help patients return to their warm homes for spending their final stage of life. However, family members often do not know how to handle a patient as they approach death and this may increase the patient’s suffering. Spiritual care is time consuming and requires sufficient caregivers with professional and long term training. Enter the Clinical Buddhist Chaplain, who Ven. Tsung-Tueng envisions as actualizing Buddhist practice, participating in social welfare, promoting life education, and supporting healthy lifestyles. This is realized concretely through three basic activities: providing spiritual care to terminal patients in the community, making regular visits to family homes and community care centers, and offering support groups for both patients and families. In 2017, the group engaged in 209 visits to private homes, 112 visits to community care institutions, and a few assorted private and telephone consultations. Outside of the actual spiritual care provided by monastics—which may include specific Buddhist practices like chanting the Buddha’s name, calligraphy, and hand-painting meditation—one of the most important activities of the Great Compassion Institute is training community volunteers in spiritual care for the dying and their families. Since 2014, they have trained 55 such volunteers. Ven. Tsung-Tueng with her colleague Ven. Zhihui concluded by noting that religious organizations and monasteries that focus on issues such as end-of-life care and senior care can provide powerful assistance and support to grieving families and the well being of the community. Their work is an extremely important extension and development from the hospital based model developed by the CBC program.
Other central questions from the audience revolved around how the Clinicla Buddhist Chaplain training program could be participated in by Buddhists outside of Japan. As mentioned, there is now a basic collaboration with the Rinbutsuken Institute for Engaged Buddhism in Tokyo, which is in part facilitateted by Japanese being able to read and use Chinese characters. At this time, the program does not function in English, and it is difficult for foreigners to do on the job training in Taiwanese hospices and hospitals because of the language barrier. Rev. Jin, Director of the Rinbutsuken Institute, would like to create an international network of Buddhist chaplain training groups in the near future. With the support of Jonathan Watts, who works with Rev. Jin and also serves on the INEB Executive Committee, INEB might be able to play an important role on facilitating further linkages and cooperative work in this area, such as site visits to the variety of programs and activities, some of which are being highly developed among Buddhists in the United States, for mutual exposure and study. Hosting and facilitating short-term study and training courses are another activity INEB could support as it has numerous training centers throughout its network. As connections and interests develop in various countries on this issue, INEB can offer a non-affiliated umbrella for hosting short study and training programs with visiting experts in the field of Buddhist chaplaincy training. These are basic areas of engagement as the movement continues to develop internationally. In conclusion, INEB is extremely grateful to the generosity of its Taiwanese hosts for making this connection to a very important form of Buddhist social engagement that we hope will continually to develop widely throughout the Buddhist world.
For greater detail on the history and development of the CBC program in Taiwan and other such Buddhist initiatives around end-of-life care see Buddhist Care for the Dying and Bereaved, edited by Jonathan S. Watts & Yoshiharu Tomatsu (Boston: Wisdom Publications, 2012)
[2] Huimin, “The Cultivation of Buddhist Chaplains Concerning Hospice Care: A Case Study of Medical Centers in Taiwan,” trans. Jonathan Watts (lecture, Dharma Drum Buddhist College, Taiwan, September 29, 2009).
http://jneb.jp/english/activities/dyingcar/buddhist-approaches-to-dying-and-hospice-care-in-taiwan
The System of Training of Cliniclal
Buddhist Chaplain (CBC) from Taiwan to Japan
https://profrcchenmd.blogspot.com/2022/10/blog-post_13.html
https://www.health-world.com.tw/main/home/tw/thishealth_edit.php?id=65&page=29
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