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Management and leadership competencies among spiritual care managers.

Dae Hyun KimGeorge FitchettJami L AndersonAndrew N Garman
Published in: Journal of health care chaplaincy (2020)
Both the healthcare and religious landscapes in the United States are rapidly changing. Despite the dynamic environment that spiritual care managers face, many do not receive management training prior to assuming their roles and many receive little or no training once they are in their roles. This study used mixed methods to examine the applicability of the National Center for Healthcare Leadership (NCHL) competency model to spiritual care manager roles. Interviews were conducted with 10 spiritual care managers across the country, using a Behavioral Event Interviewing (BEI) methodology. Interviews were quantitatively analyzed by using Natural Language Processing and qualitatively analyzed by thematic approach using NVIVO. The results found the EXECUTION domain to be the most discussed theme, followed by RELATIONS, TRANSFORMATION, and BOUNDARY SPANNING. Collectively these analyses suggest the NCHL Leadership Competency Model can provide a useful framework for understanding the roles and development needs of spiritual care managers.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • palliative care
  • quality improvement
  • advanced cancer
  • pain management
  • randomized controlled trial
  • chronic pain
  • global health