🧪 Case Study 11.3: A Nurse Asks You to Handle Something Outside Your Scope
Scenario Overview (Realistic Hospital Setting)
Unit: Med-Surg (overflowing census, short-staffed evening shift)
Patient: Mrs. Carla M., 54, post-op complications, uncontrolled anxiety, repeated call-light use
Family: Husband (Miguel) present, visibly exhausted and frustrated
Staff: RN (Jordan), charge nurse, on-call resident physician, social worker available by consult
Chaplain: Volunteer hospital chaplain on evening rounds (you)
Presenting issue: RN Jordan pulls you aside and says, “Can you go in there and talk her down? She won’t stop panicking. She’s demanding to leave, and I don’t have time. You’re good with people—can you handle it?”
This is a common pressure moment: staff are stressed, the patient is distressed, and the chaplain is seen as “the calm fixer.”
Beneath the Surface (Whole Embodied Souls + System Stress)
Patient (Carla) — possible drivers of distress
Pain or nausea not well controlled (clinical factors you do not manage)
Medication effects (delirium, agitation)
Anxiety triggered by loss of control
Fear of complications or death
Shame about “being difficult”
Spiritual distress: “God is punishing me,” “I can’t do this,” “I’m not safe”
Husband (Miguel)
Exhaustion and caregiver strain
Irritability from fear and sleep loss
Feeling ignored by the system
Conflict between wanting to advocate and feeling helpless
RN Jordan and the system
Short staffing, time pressure, many tasks
Moral distress: “I can’t give the care I want to give”
Desire to “offload” the emotional intensity
Risk: using chaplain as substitute for clinical assessment
Ministry Sciences insight: Under high stress, systems try to push difficult emotion onto whoever seems calm. Chaplains can help—but must not become a replacement for clinical care or safety evaluation.
The Core Ethical Question
How do you support the nurse and the patient without stepping outside your scope?
You can help with:
calm presence
de-escalation through tone and permission-based care
spiritual support if welcomed
referral readiness and team alignment
You cannot:
assess pain medication efficacy
interpret medical risks
promise discharge or change orders
function as a therapist or security
“handle it” alone if safety is at risk
Chaplain Response Plan (Step-by-Step, Field-Ready)
Step 1: Clarify the request with the nurse (in a respectful way)
You say:
“I’m glad to help with supportive presence, but I can’t replace clinical assessment. Is Carla medically stable right now? Has the provider been updated?”
Then ask:
“Is there a specific concern—pain, confusion, or threats of leaving—so we can loop in the right person?”
This signals teamwork and protects safety.
Step 2: Ask what the nurse wants you to accomplish (keep it realistic)
You say:
“I can go in, introduce myself, listen, and help her feel less alone. If she’s asking medical questions or wants to leave, I’ll help her communicate those concerns to you. Does that work?”
Now you’ve defined your lane clearly.
Step 3: Enter the room with consent and a calming posture
You enter slowly. Sit if appropriate.
You say:
“Hi, I’m the chaplain. I’m here to support you. Is it okay if I sit with you for a minute?”
Then a grounding line:
“You’re not alone right now.”
You’re not doing therapy. You’re offering presence.
Step 4: Name what you observe and invite one simple sentence
Carla is crying and says, “I can’t breathe. I’m going to die. I need to leave now!”
You respond:
“This feels terrifying. Thank you for telling me.”
“In one sentence—what feels most scary right now?”
This helps her move from chaotic panic to a single expressed fear.
Step 5: Keep medical questions in the medical lane
If she says, “My pain medicine isn’t working,” you say:
“That’s important for your nurse and doctor to know. Would you like me to help you tell Jordan exactly what you’re feeling?”
Then you can step out briefly and tell the nurse:
“She reports uncontrolled pain and intense fear. She wants to talk about leaving. Can you come in when you can, and should we update the provider?”
You do not interpret the pain. You relay concerns.
Step 6: Offer consent-based spiritual support (only if welcomed)
If Carla asks, “Can you pray? I’m scared,” you say:
“Yes. Would you like a short prayer in Jesus’ name, or a more general prayer for peace?”
If she consents, pray briefly:
“God, be near to Carla. Give her peace and steady her breathing. Give the team wisdom and comfort her heart. Amen.”
If she declines prayer:
“Thank you for telling me. I can stay quietly for a moment.”
Step 7: Support the husband without recruiting him into conflict
Miguel snaps at the nurse later, “No one cares!”
You can say to Miguel:
“You look exhausted. This is a lot.”
“Let’s focus on one clear question for the nurse so you can get support.”
Do not become an ally against staff. Validate emotion and redirect to collaboration.
Step 8: Close the visit with clear next steps
You say:
“I’m going to let your nurse know what you shared so you can get the right help.”
“Would you like me to check back later?”
Then you follow unit norms.
Chaplain Do’s and Don’ts (Team-Based Care)
Do
Do clarify the nurse’s request and define your lane.
Do offer calm presence and consent-based spiritual care.
Do help the patient name one clear fear or request.
Do refer clinical concerns back to RN/MD.
Do involve social work if caregiver strain or conflict is intense.
Do document per policy if your role requires it (brief, objective).
Don’t
Don’t promise: “I’ll fix this” or “I’ll get you discharged.”
Don’t counsel as a therapist or attempt prolonged anxiety treatment.
Don’t contradict staff or interpret medications.
Don’t carry the nurse’s workload or become the unit’s emotional dumping ground.
Don’t ignore safety signals (threats, aggression, self-harm statements).
Sample Phrases to SAY (Practical Scripts)
To the nurse (scope clarity + teamwork)
“I can support with presence, but clinical concerns need you and the provider.”
“Has the provider been updated about her distress and desire to leave?”
“I’ll listen and help her communicate clearly to you.”
To the patient (de-escalation, not therapy)
“This feels terrifying. I’m here with you.”
“In one sentence, what feels most scary right now?”
“Would you like quiet, a short prayer, or for me to help you talk to the nurse?”
To the husband (support without triangulation)
“You’re carrying a lot. Let’s slow down and choose one question to ask.”
“It’s okay to advocate, and it helps to keep it clear and calm.”
Sample Phrases NOT to Say (What Not to Do)
“You’re fine—calm down.”
“This is just anxiety.”
“Your nurse should be doing better.”
“If you had more faith, you wouldn’t panic.”
“I’ll take care of this; you don’t need the nurse.”
“Just breathe like this and you’ll be cured.” (sounds like therapy/medical)
“You can leave if you want.” (safety and policy risk)
Boundary Map Reminders (Limits, Consent, Documentation, Safety)
Limits
You are not a clinician. You do not assess medications or prognosis.
You do not manage agitation alone if safety is at risk.
Consent
Ask permission to sit, pray, or read Scripture.
Respect “no” without offense.
Documentation (if required)
Document only what is relevant:
distress observed
support offered
patient requests
referrals made to RN/SW/MD
Avoid medical commentary or family judgments.
Safety triggers
If you hear:
self-harm statements
threats toward staff
attempts to leave unsafely
Notify staff immediately through policy channels.
“Beneath the Surface” Ministry Sciences Analysis (Why This Worked)
The chaplain lowered emotional heat through calm presence and short questions.
The chaplain preserved moral agency by offering choices.
The chaplain refused role confusion and redirected clinical issues to the RN/MD.
The chaplain supported the nurse without becoming a substitute clinician.
The chaplain avoided triangulation with the husband and validated emotion without blaming staff.
(A) Reflection + Application Questions
What is your best one-sentence boundary line when staff ask you to do something outside your scope?
What are two signs that a patient’s distress needs immediate RN/MD involvement?
Write three short phrases you can use to de-escalate without doing therapy.
How do you validate a caregiver’s frustration without joining them against staff?
If the patient requests prayer, how will you ask permission and keep it brief?
What would you document (or communicate) after this visit, if your role requires it?
Where are you most tempted to become the “fixer,” and how will you resist?
(B) References
The Holy Bible, World English Bible (WEB): James 1:19; Proverbs 15:1; 1 Corinthians 14:40; Colossians 3:12–14; Romans 12:18.
Puchalski, C. M., et al. (2014). Improving the spiritual dimension of whole person care: Reaching national and international consensus. Journal of Palliative Medicine, 17(6), 642–656.
Fitchett, G., & Nolan, S. (Eds.). (2015). Spiritual Care in Practice: Case Studies in Healthcare Chaplaincy. Jessica Kingsley Publishers.
Back, A. L., Arnold, R. M., & Tulsky, J. A. (2009). Mastering Communication with Seriously Ill Patients: Balancing Honesty with Empathy and Hope. Cambridge University Press.
National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative Care. (2018). Clinical Practice Guidelines for Quality Palliative Care (4th ed.).
Reyenga, H. (n.d.). Organic Humans (manuscript/book project). Christian Leaders Institute.