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FOR PATIENTS & FAMILIES
About Our Services FOR Pastoral Care social services/case management |
PASTORAL CARE |
![]() Pastoral & Spiritual Care Patients and their loved ones have different emotional and spiritual responses when hospital care is required - whether for surgery, diagnosis, trauma, treatment or giving birth. For many people, religious faith or spiritual practice help them cope with health problems and related issues. Chaplains can offer compassionate support by providing prayer and pastoral conversation, discussing problems and sharing difficult decisions. At the Elliot Hospital, we recognize that assisting with your spiritual and religious needs is an important part of caring for you as a whole person. To respond to these needs, we offer the services of our Pastoral Care Department. Care is available to people of all faiths and to those of no religious affiliation. Our Pastoral Care department is comprised of on-staff chaplains who can respond to the needs of various faith traditions. We also coordinate the presence of a Catholic ministry with the Diocese of Manchester through the presence of Eucharistic Ministers and of priests who are in-house part-time and on-call. Our chaplains serve as members of the healthcare team, working closely with nurses, physicians, social workers and others who care for you and your family.
Chaplaincy services include emergency and referral-based spiritual care to patients of all ages and their families and to all staff members. Emergency coverage is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Situations to which chaplains are called include:
Chaplaincy services are offered in response to spiritual needs such as love, hope, trust, forgiveness, and meaning, as well as to religious ritual needs. Through religious or secular methods, the Chaplain encourages people to draw on their spiritual strengths to cope with whatever circumstances they face.
You may arrange to be visited by a chaplain prior to or during your admission. From outside the hospital dial (603) 663-2338. From within the hospital, simply dial 2338 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. You may reach a chaplain at other times by dialing "0" and asking the operator to contact the chaplain. You may also ask your nurse to contact a chaplain for you.
'Whoever Will, May Enter Here' You will find the Elliot Hospital chapel located on the first floor, around the corner from the 1890 Café, just inside the Emergency Department entrance by the Security Office. The Elliot Hospital chapel is open at all times for everyone - all patients, personnel and relatives -regardless of religion. There are no traditional religious symbols in the chapel so that you may meditate or pray in your own way. A notebook located on the front table of the chapel is provided for you to record a concern, prayer request, or celebration so that others may share your burdens and joys. In many ways, this notebook is a record of the spiritual life that flows through every aspect of the Elliot.
Prayer is a powerful force that asks for and welcomes God's help. God is present to aid us in the healing process - to support us in our time of illness, crisis, or need. Prayer helps us overcome fear and anxiety as we seek understanding, forgiveness and love. These prayers come from various faiths and represent spiritual resources for healing and hope.
Jewish Prayer on Behalf of the Sick
Muslim Prayer of Consolation and Patience
Hindu Prayer for The Healing of Body, Mind and Spirit
The Pastoral Care Department assists with the Elliot's implementation of the Patient Self Determination Act of 1990. This federal law requires that all adult patients admitted to hospitals and other healthcare institutions be provided written information regarding:
The hospital provides the required information to the patient and documents whether the patient has executed an Advance Directive. Social Workers and Chaplains implement and staff the educational components of this program. Physicians are responsible for assuring that the patient's expressed intentions for medical treatment are documented and implemented. Click here to view the Advance Directives Care Planning Program Guide. The Pastoral Care Department assists local clergy so their visits to the hospital are easier and more successful. An identification badge is available to clergy visiting the hospital. We request that any official representative from a religious community obtain an identification badge through the Human Relations Office and check in at the Social Work And Case Management/Pastoral Care Office located on the first floor, past the main elevators and across the hall from the 1890 Café. Here are some of the guidelines that we hope will be helpful to your in your ministry: 1) Elliot Hospital visiting hours are from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Please wear your EHS Visiting Minister ID badge at all times, but especially after 8 p.m. when visitation is limited to authorized personnel only. After 8 pm, ALL visitors must enter through the Emergency Department and sign in at the security desk. 2) A patient census, listed by parish, will assist you in locating your parishioners from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. This census book is located with the Administrative Assistant in the Social Work And Case Management/Pastoral Care Office located on the first floor, past the main elevators and across the hall from the 1890 Café. 3) Reserved parking is available for visiting clergy in the Emergency Department parking lot. 4) Confidentiality is important to our patients. Please note how the Federal HIPAA law pertains to the Minister and patient:
5) When visiting a parishioner on the Intensive Care Unit, please use the special red telephone located in the ICU waiting room to contact the nursing unit for visitation clearance. 6) When visiting a patient in isolation, there are infection control signs near the door that alert the visitor of precautions that must be taken. 7) Thorough hand washing is an important part of keeping infection in the hospital under control. 8) Relay a patient request for something to eat or drink, even water, to their nurse. 9) If a patient exhibits unusual behavior, such as choking, problems breathing, or changing color, call the nurse by using the bedside signal or by going to the nursing station. Always allow medial staff the right-of-way during an emergency. 10) If administering the communion elements, please check with the patient's nurse if you have any questions regarding the patient's ability to swallow. Please remember that any unethical or disruptive conduct during hospital visitations is not allowed. In addition, room-to-room proselytizing is strictly prohibited as it infringes upon patient care and our patients' right to privacy. Any such conduct will result in expulsion from the hospital. Religious literature may be left with individual parishioners, but the general distribution or the placement of such literature is not permitted.
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