🧪 Case Study 2.3: The Family Who Thinks Hospice Means Giving Up
🧪 Case Study 2.3: The Family Who Thinks Hospice Means Giving Up
Scenario Overview (Setting + People)
Setting: Home hospice visit in a small living room. The patient’s hospital bed has been set up near a window. A hospice RN has visited earlier in the day to review symptoms and medication schedule.
Patient: Mr. Carl Jensen, late 70s, advanced heart failure with repeated hospitalizations. He is alert but easily fatigued. He has moments of shortness of breath and anxiety when he feels he “can’t get enough air.”
Family:
Linda (wife, primary caregiver): exhausted, emotionally raw, trying to hold everything together.
Mark (adult son): angry, pacing, suspicious of hospice; believes the family is “quitting.”
Emily (adult daughter): quieter, tearful, conflicted, trying to keep peace between mom and brother.
Chaplain (You): Volunteer or part-time hospice chaplain assigned for a first spiritual care visit after hospice admission.
What’s Happening on the Surface
When you arrive, Mark speaks first and speaks fast:
“So this is it? Hospice means we’re just giving up? You’re here to make us feel better about letting Dad die.”
Linda looks down. Emily wipes tears. Mr. Jensen turns his head slightly toward the window and closes his eyes.
The emotional temperature is high. This family is not primarily asking for theology. They are asking for meaning, control, and safety.
Beneath the Surface (Ministry Sciences + Organic Humans Lens)
1) Fear dressed up as anger
Mark’s anger may be covering:
fear of loss
fear of regret (“Did we do enough?”)
fear of being judged by others (“You quit on him.”)
fear of helplessness (“I can’t fix this.”)
2) Caregiver overload and anticipatory grief
Linda’s silence may indicate:
exhaustion and overwhelm
grief she has not had time to feel
guilt about relief (“I can’t do this alone anymore.”)
3) Mr. Jensen’s agency is fragile
The patient may feel:
like a burden
loss of control
fear of breathlessness
fear of dying alone
unspoken spiritual questions
Organic Humans integration: Mr. Jensen is a whole embodied soul. His shortness of breath is physical, but it also presses on fear, identity, and meaning. Your posture must protect dignity and moral agency even when the family is loud.
Your Ministry Goal in This Visit
Your goal is not to win an argument.
Your goal is to:
lower the emotional temperature
protect dignity and consent
clarify hospice purpose without medical overreach
restore agency (options, permission, pacing)
prevent triangulation (not taking sides)
support the plan of care by referring questions appropriately
Step-by-Step Chaplain Approach (What to Do)
Step 1: Enter with calm and consent
Move slowly. Sit if invited. Keep your voice calm.
Say (sample):
“Thank you for letting me come. I can hear how heavy this feels.”
“Before we talk, is it okay if I sit here?”
“Mr. Jensen, would you like me to speak with the family, or keep it simple and just be present today?”
This communicates that the patient is not an object of discussion. He is a person with agency.
Step 2: Name the emotion without endorsing conclusions
You can validate feelings without validating misinformation.
Say:
“It makes sense that this feels like giving up. Many families feel that at first.”
“I’m not here to push decisions. I’m here to support your family and honor your wishes.”
Step 3: Reframe hospice in plain language (stay in your lane)
Avoid details about medical criteria. Speak about purpose.
Say:
“Hospice is added support for comfort and dignity, so you don’t carry this alone.”
“Hospice doesn’t mean we stop caring. It means the goal becomes comfort, peace, and support.”
Step 4: Restore agency by offering choices
Stress reduces meaning-making. Choices help.
Say:
“Would it help most if I listen for a few minutes, share a short Scripture, or pray briefly—only if you want?”
“Mark, would you like to tell me what you’re most afraid of right now?”
Step 5: Protect the patient from being debated over
If conflict escalates, gently redirect toward Mr. Jensen’s dignity.
Say:
“Let’s make sure we’re honoring Mr. Jensen’s comfort while we talk.”
“Mr. Jensen, is this conversation okay for you right now, or would you like a quieter moment?”
Step 6: Refer medical questions appropriately
If Mark presses for details about meds, oxygen, or prognosis:
Say:
“That’s an important question, and the nurse can answer it clearly. Would you like me to help you write it down so you can ask the RN today?”
This builds trust and avoids scope creep.
Step 7: Offer brief, consent-based spiritual care
If the patient or family welcomes it, keep it short and gentle.
Optional Scripture (WEB):
“Yahweh is my shepherd: I shall lack nothing.” (Psalm 23:1)
“Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; for you are with me.” (Psalm 23:4)
Optional prayer (brief):
“Lord, bring peace to this home. Strengthen this family. Comfort Mr. Jensen with your presence. Give wisdom to the care team and gentleness to each heart. Amen.”
What Not to Do (Required)
What Not to Do in This Visit
Do not argue with Mark or “correct” him harshly.
Do not explain hospice eligibility rules, prognoses, or medications.
Do not imply the family is faithless if they struggle.
Do not use clichés: “Everything happens for a reason.”
Do not pressure prayer, confession, or conversion.
Do not take sides (“Your mom is right,” “Your brother is wrong”).
Do not promise secrecy if safety issues emerge.
Sample Phrases to SAY
“I can hear how much you love him.”
“This is hard. You don’t have to be strong every second.”
“Hospice is extra support for comfort and dignity.”
“Would you like me to listen, pray, or sit quietly?”
“What matters most to you today?”
“Let’s honor Mr. Jensen’s comfort while we talk.”
“That medical question is best answered by the RN—let’s make sure you get clarity.”
Sample Phrases NOT to Say
“You just have to accept it.”
“God needed another angel.”
“This is God’s will, so don’t be upset.”
“If you had more faith, you wouldn’t feel this way.”
“Don’t worry—he’ll be healed.”
“Let me explain what the nurse is doing.”
“Your brother is in denial.”
Boundary Map Reminders (Limits + Consent + Team Alignment)
Limits: You are not the medical lead, legal guide, or family therapist.
Consent: Ask permission for prayer, Scripture, touch, and sensitive questions.
Documentation norms: Follow hospice agency expectations (charting, if required).
Team communication: Share concerns through appropriate channels (RN/SW).
Safety: If you observe abuse risk, self-harm statements, or unsafe care conditions, follow policy and report appropriately.
Pace: Your goal is stabilizing, not solving everything in one visit.
Outcome (A Realistic “Win”)
After you listen calmly, Mark’s voice lowers. He sits down. Linda exhales. Emily nods.
Mr. Jensen says quietly:
“I’m tired. I don’t want my family fighting.”
You affirm:
“Thank you for saying that. We can honor your comfort and your peace.”
You leave the family with one next step:
“Write down your questions for the nurse, and I’ll check in again soon if you’d like.”
That is hospice chaplaincy: faithful presence that reduces chaos and protects dignity.
Reflection + Application Questions
What was Mark’s anger protecting beneath the surface? Name at least three possibilities.
How did you protect Mr. Jensen’s dignity and moral agency during a family conflict moment?
What phrase could you use to reframe hospice purpose without giving medical advice?
What are two “What Not to Do” errors that would most quickly break trust in this scenario?
When would you refer to the RN? When would you refer to the social worker?
How does the “whole embodied soul” lens change how you treat breathlessness, fatigue, and fear?
What brief Scripture and prayer would you offer—only with permission?
References
Biblical (WEB):
Psalm 23:1, 4
Romans 12:15
Philippians 4:5–7
Hospice / Palliative Care and Spiritual Care:
National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO). Interdisciplinary hospice care overview resources.
Puchalski, C. M., & Ferrell, B. (Eds.). Making Health Care Whole: Integrating Spirituality into Patient Care.
VandeCreek, L., & Burton, L. (Eds.). Professional Chaplaincy: Its Role and Importance in Healthcare (role clarity, professional conduct).
Fitchett, G. Assessing Spiritual Needs: A Guide for Caregivers.