Clinical Buddhist Chaplaincy Training Program:
History of the Development of Taiwan’s Clinical
Buddhism
Rong-Chi
Chen1*
1En Chu
Kong Hospital,Sanhsia District,New Taipei City, 23702, Taiwan
*Correspondence: Rong-Chi Chen,MD,PhD,FANA.
En Chu Kong Hospital,Sanhsia District,New Taipei City, 23702, Taiwan. Email: rongchichen@gmail.com.
Journal
of Scientific Discovery
Citation: JSci Discov (2017);1(1):jsd17005;DOI:10.24262/jsd.1.1.17005
Abstract
Morden
hospice palliative care was introduced into Taiwan in 1990. Buddhist Lotus
Hospice Care Foundation(LHCF) was organized in 1994 to join the hospice
movement. In order to invite Buddhist chaplains to join the care of hospice
patients, LHCF started to establish Clinical Buddhist Chaplaincy (CBC) Training
Program at the palliative unit of the National Taiwan University Hospital in
1998. It has succeeded complete training of 63 chaplains. 33 of them now served
in 44 hospice units in Taiwan. The participation of the certified Clinical
Buddhist Chanlains(CBCs) in the hospice care has remarkably improved the
quality of spiritual care for the terminal patients. Being the first in the
hospice history and also Buddhist history, this CBC training system has
spreaded from Taiwan to Japan.
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Key
words:
Hospice palliative care, clinical Buddhism,
clinical chaplaincy, clinical Buddhist chaplain (CBC), clinical monastic,
Hospice palliative care act, Patient self determination act, Natural death act,
good death, peaceful death, dignified death
Introduction
Modern hospice palliative care organization was started by Dr. Dame
Cicely Saunders at the St. Christopher’s Hospice in London in 1967.[1] This
humane form of holistic health care has gradually spread around the world,
reaching Taiwan in 1990 at the Christian Mackay Memorial Hospital in Tamsui, Taipei
County in 1990 [2]. The second hospice ward was established in 1994 at the
Catholic Cardinal Tien Hospital in Hsindian, Taipei County. In 1994 the author
was invited by the Christian Hospice Foundation of Taiwan to visit a few
leading hospices in Japan to learn more about the management [3]. In 1995 the
author opened a palliative unit at the National Taiwan University Hospital (NTUH)
in Taipei City, the first in the public government-owned hospital and
university hospital[3]. It added the momentum of spreading of hospice
palliative care over Taiwan.
Development
of Hospice Palliative Care in Taiwan
With the cooperation of the 3 major religious organizations, the
Christian Hospice Foundation of Taiwan
[4], the Catholic Sanipax Socio-Medical Service & Education Foundation [5],
and the Buddhist Lotus Hospice Care Foundation(LHCF)[6], together with many non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) and the governmental support, the hopspice palliative care
movement flourished in Taiwan [7]. With a population of 23 millions, and a
territory of 36,000 Km2, we now have 62 hospice wards in general
hospitals, 101 hospice home care teams, 200 hospice community care teams. Hopsice
Palliative Care Act (a Natural Death Act) was established in 2000 [8] and
Patient Self Determination Act was promulgated in 2016 [9]. Taiwan was twice
ranked the first in Asian countries in the quality of end-of-life care by the
Lien Foundation [10,11].
The Hospice Palliative Care Act gives our people the right to choose do
no resuscitation (DNR) at the terminal stage of life [8]. According to the
Patient Self Determination Act, “the patient can ask for withholding or
withdrawal of the life sustaining treatments if he/she is 1. A terminal
patient, 2. In the irreversible comatous state, 3. In the persistent vegetative
state, 4. In the severe dementia state, 5. The patient is in intolerable pain,
an incurable disease without adequate solution under the current medical
standard.” These life-sustaining treatments include cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (CPR), artificial ventilation, mechanical life sustaining system
(such as ECMO), blood substitutes, chemotherapy, dialysis, antibiotics for
fatal infections, artificial nutrition and artificial liquid feeding, etc. [9,12].
Need
for Clinical Buddhist Chaplains in the Spiritual Care
Shortly
after the beginning of the Palliative Ward at National Taiwan University
Hospital in 1995, a Buddhist nun and then a monk volunteered to join the team
to provide spiritual care of hospice patients. However, without the proper
preparation of knowledge about the medical conditions of the patients they both
failed and quit.
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. 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, it would be good to invite some enthusiastic monks and nuns to begin
such training. [13,14]
Clinical
Buddhist Chaplaincy Training Program
Since
1998, the Buddhist Lotus Hospice Care Foundation (LHCF) began to cooperate with
the Palliative Unit of the National Taiwan University Hospital to start the
Clinical Buddhist Chaplaincy (CBC) Training Program. [13,14] The program was
funded by the LHCF.
Prof. CY Chen, the chairman of the Family Medicine Department of the
National University Hospital [15] and Ven. Huimin, chancellor of the Dharma
Drum Mountain Institute of Liberal Arts [16] were invited to preside over the
CBC Training Program. “Clinical Buddhist
Chaplain” refers to the Buddhist chaplain who has been trained and takes up
front-line duties in the hospice and palliative care medical team, offering
care to patients in the body, mind, social and spiritual aspects; who is also
one of the core members of the hospice and palliative care medical team.”[6,17]
The content of the CBC Training Program consists
of 62.5 hours of classroom courses and 80 hours of Internship bedside practice
in the hospice ward (from Monday to Friday, 8 hours per day for 2 weeks). The
classroom curriculum includes introductory history of hospice palliative care,
medical conditions of terminal patients suffering from cancer or major organ
failures, psychosocial and spiritual need of terminal patients, ethical and
legal problems, grief consoling of family members, preparation for discharge
from hospital, application of Buddhist doctrines in hospice care, clinical
application of life and death education, etc. After finishing 62.5-hour
classroom course, and 80-hour intership, test will be given. Those passed the
test, can enter bedside Residency training course for 600 hours in 15 weeks in
hospice ward. After passing the final test they were issued the Certificate of
CBC by LHCF. Then they are introduced to hospice service most convenient for
them to attend to become a spiritual care member of the hospice team.
Prof. CY Chen designed an Indigenous Spiritual Care Structure to
summarize the core issue of CBC in spiritual care. [15,18] (Fig. 1). Following The
Four Noble Truths of Buddha’s teaching: Sufferings, Causation (of sufferings),
Cessation (of sufferings) and Path (to liberation or to Pure Land of Paradise),
he tried to fit into the patient’s conditions: truth telling, acceptance of
death, experience the existence of spirituality, and through Buddhist teachings
and practice to the final path of liberation.
Ven. Huimin claimed that “The spiritual stage could be lifted in
palliative medical care but the results were more obvious with the guidance of
the Buddhist chaplain. When terminal cancer patients are faced with worsening
symptoms and approaching death, spiritual care can significantly improve the
quality of life.” [16]
Up
to May 2017, there were 63 completed the training (including 2 Catholic nuns), 33
CBCs serving in 44 hospices in Taiwan. (Fig.2) Many others engaged in community
services. They are required to attend continual education regularly. A senior
teacher will travel to visit each hospice with CBC once a year to encourage
them, listen to their need and extend help from LHCF if needed [19]. A Taiwan
Association of Clinical Buddhist Studies was established in 2007 to strengthen
the team spirit of the CBCs [20]. This Association is also active to
participate the community hospice care activities of Taipei City Hospitals.
There
are thousand ways of dharma-practice in Buddhism. The most commonly used practices
in hospice care by the CBCs consist of the following: 1. Practicing all righteousness,
2.Take refuge in theTriple Gems, 3.Recitation of Buddha’s name, 4.Practice on
counting the breath, 5.Repentance, 6.End-of-life Dharma speech and reciting
Buddha’s name to dying patients, 6.Meditation (dhyana). After nearly 20 years history of participating in the clinical
work in hospices, 2 books collecting many heart-touching stories of how
peaceful death was achieved by the spiritual care of the CBCs were published, i.e.
Stethoscope and Rosary (240 pages), and The Mysteries of Life and Death (319
pages) (Fig.3).[21,22] The strong impact of these books was reflected by the
good sale and need of reprintings in short intervals.
Spreading
of CBC Training Program Abroad
In
the trainees there were Catholic nuns, Japanese Buddhist monastics, nuns from
Malaysia and Singapore. The training program has spreaded to Japan in 2013
[14,23]. A nun from Malaysia completed the
CBC training course and returned to Malaysia to participate in the hospice
care. Hope this will further expand to other nations with large proportion of
Budddhist followers in the population.
“In
one's final moments, quality of life may be more important than the mere
prolongation of existence. Physicians who respect patients' wishes and provide
hospice palliative care, can foster a peaceful and dignified departure from
life, although the benefits that this provides may not be easily determined
empirically. Filial duty and love should find its expression in being with the
family member at the end of his or her life, and in encouraging acceptance of
disease, quiet life in his last days and peaceful passing. Where it is unavoidable,
the death of a patient is not a medical failure. Not being able to facilitate a
peaceful and dignified demise is, however.” [24] Life is the best gift and good
death is the most beautiful blessing. [6]
Fig. 1 Spiritual Care Structure. Quoted from
Chen CY. [15,18] with permission and minor modification.
Fig 2. Distribution of Clinical Buddhist Chaplains Serving in Taiwan’s Hospices
Fig. 3 2 Books of CBCs’ Spiritual Care in Hospice Palliative Services (L: Stethoscope and Rosary[21]; R: The Mysteries of Life and Death[22].).
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