Deacon Richard Becker, director of pastoral care and ethics, blesses patient Camille Watts on World Day of the Sick at Good Samaritan Hospital Medical Center in West Islip, N.Y., Feb. 11, 2021. Hospital chaplains have had to adhere to COVID-19 protocols while offering pastoral care during the coronavirus pandemic. (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz) Feb. 24, 2021 Catholic News Service WASHINGTON When health care chaplains talk about the need for self-care, they really mean it, especially after this past year. That s because they have been on call to provide emotional and spiritual support to patients, families and medical staffs in ways beyond what they had ever prepared for when the coronavirus hit the United States last February and since it just surpassed the death toll of 500,000 this Feb. 22.
We were here â health care chaplains reflect on COVID-19 ministry Deacon Richard Becker, director of pastoral care and ethics, blesses patient Camille Watts on World Day of the Sick at Good Samaritan Hospital Medical Center in West Islip, N.Y., Feb. 11. Hospital chaplains have had to adhere to COVID-19 protocols while offering pastoral care during the coronavirus pandemic. (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz)
Carol Zimmerman, Catholic News Service 2/25/2021 9:08 AM
select Florence Bolton, 85, a COVID-19 patient at Roseland Community Hospital in Chicago, lies in her bed in intensive care Dec. 1, 2020, as family members attempt to FaceTime her. Hospital chaplains have increasingly used electronic digital devices to offer pastoral care to patients with the coronavirus. (CNS photo/Shannon Stapleton, Reuters)