Healthcare chaplaincy in the National Health Service (NHS) has rapidly changed in the last few years. Research shows a decline of people belonging to traditional faith frameworks, and the non-religious patient demographic in the NHS has increased swiftly. This requires a different approach to healthcare chaplaincy. Where chaplaincy has originally been a Christian profession, this has expanded to a multi-faith context. Over the last five years, humanists with non-religious beliefs have entered the profession for the first time, creating multi-faith and belief teams. As this is a very new development, this article will focus on literature about humanists entering traditionally faith-based NHS chaplaincy teams within the last five years in Eng...
Abstract: What does it mean to be a healthcare chaplain? The recent introduc-tion of the chaplaincy...
The article argues that a theology of chaplaincy needs to identify, analyse, and evaluate the theolo...
The last two decades have witnessed a shift in the conversation on secularism and secular identities...
In UK society today, over half of the adult population identify as ‘non-religious’. Of those, about ...
The article reports on the findings of a systematised literature review (SLR) of how the spiritual n...
This chapter considers how chaplaincy in the UK setting has adapted to religious diversity, within a...
This paper sought to explore how hospitals can be reconfigured to adopting more ‘health-promoting’ a...
Recent developments in Dutch society and its healthcare system pose new challenges to humanist chapl...
This paper reviews the issues confronting chaplaincy/spiritual care in the 21st century. It looks at...
Abstract: Healthcare and spirituality both address the question of what it means to be human. In an...
This paper reviews the issues confronting chaplaincy/spiritual care in the 21st century. It looks at...
Abstract: This paper explores the inter-faith pastoral care provided by Australian Chris-tian healt...
This chapter identifies spiritual care as a contested practice in modern healthcare, shaped by the n...
There has been a limited amount of empirical research conducted in the past on how chaplains, and hu...
There has been a limited amount of empirical research conducted in the past on how chaplains, and hu...
Abstract: What does it mean to be a healthcare chaplain? The recent introduc-tion of the chaplaincy...
The article argues that a theology of chaplaincy needs to identify, analyse, and evaluate the theolo...
The last two decades have witnessed a shift in the conversation on secularism and secular identities...
In UK society today, over half of the adult population identify as ‘non-religious’. Of those, about ...
The article reports on the findings of a systematised literature review (SLR) of how the spiritual n...
This chapter considers how chaplaincy in the UK setting has adapted to religious diversity, within a...
This paper sought to explore how hospitals can be reconfigured to adopting more ‘health-promoting’ a...
Recent developments in Dutch society and its healthcare system pose new challenges to humanist chapl...
This paper reviews the issues confronting chaplaincy/spiritual care in the 21st century. It looks at...
Abstract: Healthcare and spirituality both address the question of what it means to be human. In an...
This paper reviews the issues confronting chaplaincy/spiritual care in the 21st century. It looks at...
Abstract: This paper explores the inter-faith pastoral care provided by Australian Chris-tian healt...
This chapter identifies spiritual care as a contested practice in modern healthcare, shaped by the n...
There has been a limited amount of empirical research conducted in the past on how chaplains, and hu...
There has been a limited amount of empirical research conducted in the past on how chaplains, and hu...
Abstract: What does it mean to be a healthcare chaplain? The recent introduc-tion of the chaplaincy...
The article argues that a theology of chaplaincy needs to identify, analyse, and evaluate the theolo...
The last two decades have witnessed a shift in the conversation on secularism and secular identities...