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Faithful Citizenship: A Call to Political Responsibility
Sacred Heart Major Seminary
The Retreat Center at St. John's
Together In Faith
Promise to Protect/Pledge to Heal
Church Leadership: Mission Possible
The Michigan Catholic News Catholic Television Network Detroit

Link to Podcasts Page
Catholic Services Appeal 2007
 
Parish Nursing
Emphasizing Integration of Body/Mind/Spirit
 
The concept of Parish Nursing has its roots in the deaconal ministry of the early post-resurrection church.  The title deacon, derived from the Greek term diakonia meaning "to serve" was given to women and men whose responsibility it was to visit and care for the sick in the way Jesus had done.  Not only did these deacons and deaconesses care for those who had physical needs, but in the manner of Jesus, they also attended to the emotional and spiritual needs of their faith communities. 
 
During medieval times, the ministry of healing was taken over by monks and nuns, who turned their monasteries into hospitals.  The care given focused more on physical needs, but the care provided was done so in the manner of Jesus, as a ministry of service.
 
In more recent times, the ministry of healing within the church was continued by religious orders of women and men, who established hospitals and extended care facilities. In these facilities, physical and emotional care were provided, but attention was also paid to the spiritual health of the patients as demonstrated by the creation of Pastoral Care Departments.  Since the 1980's as the concept of health promotion has become more recognized as a focus of health care providers, the concept of the Parish Nurse has been revitalized within the faith community.  While this concept is not so new given that it has roots back to the time of the early church, it is a new concept for a new time in the history of health care in the United States and it marks a new kind of collaboration between hospitals and faith communities.
 
In the Archdiocese of Detroit, the Parish Nurse Ministry began in the late 1980's at St. Luke and St. Raymond Parish.  Within several years, St. Charles Borromeo began a Parish Nurse Ministry in collaboration with Amicare, a Home Health Care agency sponsored by Mercy Health Services (now Trinity Health).  Soon after, St. John Hospital and St. Joseph Mercy in Macomb established Parish Nurse Ministry programs in collaboration with faith communities in their geographic areas.  Today, there are numerous parishes with Parish Nurse Ministry programs, which are directly supported by the major hospitals and health systems in the Archdiocese of Detroit.
 
Root Assumption
Parish Nursing is rooted in the Judeo-Christian tradition, consistent with the basic assumptions of all faiths, that we care for self and others as an expression of God's love.

Mission
The mission of parish nursing is the intentional integration of the practice of faith with the practice of nursing so that people can achieve wholeness in, with, and through the community of faith in which parish nurses serve.
 Parish Nursing
 305 Michigan Ave.
 GRB -10
 Detroit, MI 48226
 Contact:(313) 237-5978
 Facsimile:(313) 237-5869
 E-Mail:ParishNursing@aod.org

About Parish Nursing - Printable Version
Parish Nurse Ministry
Information
Why a nurse on church staff?
Parish Nurse Program
Do's and Don'ts
Parish Nursing Flyer
 
Related Links
Health Ministry Association
Intl. Parish Nurse Resource Center
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