đ§Ș Case Study 3.3: âCan You Tell the Nurse Not to Increase the Morphine?â
đ§Ș Case Study 3.3: âCan You Tell the Nurse Not to Increase the Morphine?â
Scenario Overview (Setting + People)
Setting: Skilled nursing facility (SNF) room, late afternoon. The patient is on hospice. The facility is busy. A nurse has recently adjusted the comfort medication schedule due to increased pain and agitation.
Patient: Mrs. Evelyn Harper, 82, advanced cancer with escalating pain and periods of confusion. She is intermittently alert, sometimes drowsy. When awake, she appears anxious and grimaces during movement.
Family:
Diane (adult daughter): present most days, protective, exhausted, emotionally flooded. She is deeply afraid that medication will âhasten deathâ or âknock Mom out.â
Tom (adult son): visits less often, tense, suspicious of hospice, strongly opinionated when present.
Mrs. Harperâs sister (occasional visitor): quiet, prayerful, anxious.
Hospice Team Context:
RN has assessed worsening pain and recommended an increase in medication per the care plan.
Social worker is scheduled to follow up later in the week.
You are visiting as the chaplain for spiritual care and family support.
What Happens (The Moment)
You enter the room. Diane meets you at the door, voice low and urgent:
âChaplain, youâve got to help me. They want to increase the morphine. I donât want my mom drugged. I donât want her to die because of that. Can you tell the nurse not to do it?â
Mrs. Harper is moaning softly. Her breathing is shallow. She opens her eyes briefly, then closes them again.
This is a high-stakes moment. Diane is not only asking for helpâshe is asking you to become a medical advocate outside your scope. If you step into that role, you risk harming trust, increasing conflict, and creating legal/clinical liability.
Beneath the Surface (Ministry Sciences + Whole-Person Lens)
1) Fear of âcausing deathâ
Diane may be experiencing moral distress:
âIf I agree to this, Iâm responsible.â
âAm I killing my mother?â
âWhat if she never wakes up again?â
This is ethical and spiritual pain, not only anxiety.
2) Grief and loss of control
Medication decisions can feel like the last âcontrol leverâ a family member has. Increased medication may symbolize:
the nearness of death
the end of conversation
the end of âfightingâ
3) Trauma history or mistrust
Sometimes families have histories of:
poor medical experiences
addiction concerns in the family
religious guilt patterns
fear of institutions
4) The patientâs dignity and comfort
Mrs. Harper is a whole embodied soul. Her suffering is spiritual and physical at once. Comfort care is not âgiving up.â It is honoring dignity and relieving suffering through the appropriate clinical team.
Your Chaplain Goal in This Case
Your goal is not to solve medication decisions. Your goal is to:
de-escalate fear
protect scope of practice
support the patientâs dignity and comfort
help the family ask the right questions to the right person
encourage calm, consent-based spiritual care
coordinate appropriately with the team
Step-by-Step Chaplain Response (What to Do)
Step 1: Regulate your presence and slow the moment
Before responding, breathe. Keep your tone low and calm.
Say:
âI can hear how afraid you are. This feels big.â
âLetâs take this one step at a time.â
You are creating safety before content.
Step 2: Clarify your role without abandoning her
Do not say, âThatâs not my job,â in a cold way. Keep it warm and clear.
Say:
âI canât direct medication decisions, but I can support you and help you talk with the nurse so you get clear answers.â
âIâll stay with you while we ask the right questions.â
Step 3: Protect dignity: attend to the patient first
Look at the patient, not only the family member.
Say (to patient, if appropriate):
âMrs. Harper, Iâm here with you.â
âWould you like me to pray quietly, or just sit with you?â
If she cannot respond, keep it gentle and minimal. Do not treat her like an object while the family debates.
Step 4: Help the family form clear questions for the RN
Your job is to help Diane communicate, not to override the plan of care.
Offer questions like:
âWhat is the goal of this adjustmentâcomfort, anxiety relief, or both?â
âHow will you monitor her breathing and comfort?â
âIs there a way to balance alertness and pain relief?â
âWhat signs should we watch for, and what do we do if weâre worried?â
âCan you explain how comfort medications work at end of life in plain language?â
This restores agency without stepping into medical authority.
Step 5: Invite the interdisciplinary team appropriately
If the conflict is intense or ongoing, request social work support.
Say:
âIt might help to have the social worker join a family conversation too, so everyone feels heard and supported.â
If the familyâs fear is spiritual and moralââAm I causing death?ââyou can support the soul-level distress while the nurse addresses clinical details.
Step 6: Offer brief spiritual care that matches the moment
If Diane is open, offer a short Scripture and prayer that addresses fear, not medical outcomes.
Optional Scripture (WEB):
âLet your gentleness be known to all men. The Lord is at hand.â (Philippians 4:5)
âYahweh is near to those who have a broken heart.â (Psalm 34:18)
Optional prayer:
âLord, bring calm and clarity. Give Diane wisdom and peace as she asks questions. Comfort Mrs. Harper and surround her with mercy. Guide the care team as they relieve suffering with gentleness. Amen.â
Keep it short. Do not turn prayer into persuasion.
What Not to Do (Required)
What Not to Do in This Situation
Do not tell the nurse what to do or speak as if you are a clinical authority.
Do not give opinions about morphine, dosing, or prognosis.
Do not imply the nurse is trying to âhasten death.â
Do not promise outcomes: âSheâll be fine,â âShe wonât die,â or âShe wonât be sedated.â
Do not shame the family member for fear (âYouâre being controllingâ).
Do not take sides against staff or against the family.
Do not carry secret messages or become the mediator without team alignment.
Sample Phrases to SAY
âI can hear how afraid you are.â
âI canât direct medications, but I can help you talk with the nurse and get clarity.â
âLetâs ask the RN to explain the goal and how they monitor comfort.â
âWe can look for a balance between comfort and alertness; the nurse can guide that.â
âWould you like a brief prayer for peace and wisdom?â
âMrs. Harper, Iâm here with you.â
Sample Phrases NOT to Say
âThey shouldnât be giving morphine.â
âMorphine will kill her.â
âYou have to trust the system.â
âYouâre overreacting.â
âThis is Godâs will, so donât fight it.â
âIf you had enough faith, you wouldnât be afraid.â
âIâll tell them to stop.â
Boundary Map Reminders (Limits + Consent + Documentation + Team Communication)
Limits: Chaplains do not give medical advice or direct medication decisions.
Consent: Ask permission before prayer, Scripture, touch, or sensitive questions.
Documentation norms: If required, document the request and your action factually (support provided, referral made).
Team communication: Notify RN/SW that family is distressed and needs clarification/supportâbriefly, respectfully.
Safety: If you hear threats, abuse risk, or unsafe care concerns, follow agency policy immediately.
Pace: Your goal is stabilization and clarity, not solving everything in one moment.
Likely Outcomes (What âSuccessâ Looks Like)
A realistic win is not perfect agreement. A realistic win is:
Diane feels heard and calmer.
The RN is invited into a respectful conversation.
The patientâs comfort is prioritized without conflict escalation.
The team supports the family with clear education and care planning.
You remain trustworthy and within scope.
Diane may still struggle. But she now has a safe path: questions go to the nurse, conflict support goes to social work, spiritual fear can be held with youâwithout you taking over.
Reflection + Application Questions
What fear was driving Dianeâs request? Name at least three layers (emotional, ethical, spiritual, systemic).
How did you protect your scope of practice without abandoning Diane?
What are five questions you can help a family ask the RN when medication fears rise?
How did you protect the patientâs dignity when the conversation became tense?
When should the social worker be involved in a case like this?
What would you document (if documentation is required) and what would you avoid documenting?
What short Scripture and prayer could you offer that addresses fear without making medical promises?
References
Biblical (WEB):
Psalm 34:18
Philippians 4:5â7
Proverbs 11:13
1 Peter 5:2â3
Hospice / Palliative Care and Ethics:
National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO). Interdisciplinary hospice care and family support resources.
World Health Organization (WHO). Palliative care definition and whole-person suffering framework.
Ferrell, B. R., & Coyle, N. (Eds.). Oxford Textbook of Palliative Nursing (comfort goals, interdisciplinary care, family distress).
Puchalski, C. M., & Ferrell, B. (Eds.). Making Health Care Whole: Integrating Spirituality into Patient Care(spiritual care within clinical systems).
Chaplaincy Practice, Boundaries, and Communication:
Association of Professional Chaplains (APC). Standards of Practice and Code of Ethics (scope, confidentiality, documentation).
VandeCreek, L., & Burton, L. (Eds.). Professional Chaplaincy: Its Role and Importance in Healthcare (role clarity, interdisciplinary communication).
Fitchett, G., & Nolan, S. (Eds.). Spiritual Care in Practice: Case Studies in Healthcare Chaplaincy (case-based boundary formation).