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The Christian Medical Fellowship: Uniting & equipping Christian doctors & nurses to live & speak for Jesus Christ.
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Christian Medical Fellowship
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      • the Christian Medical Fellowship unites and equips Christian doctors and nurses to live and speak for Jesus Christ. We were formed in 1949. We currently have 4,000 doctors, 500 medical and nursing students, and 450 nurses and midwives as members.
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        A letter to our fellow resident doctors

        December 12, 2025
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        the trouble with opt-outs

        December 1, 2025
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        Three-parent embryos: can the end ever justify the means?

        August 12, 2025
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        10jan10:00 am4:30 pmRASH: Refugee and Asylum Seeker Health Course, London

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        God calls us to care for the stranger in our midst, to protect orphans and widows,

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        God calls us to care for the stranger in our midst, to protect orphans and widows, to ‘act justly and love mercy’ . (Micah 6:8) How does this translate to the way we care today?

        Given the proposed changes to the way that our asylum system works, how can we provide the best possible healthcare to those in need?

        The ‘Refugees and Asylum Seekers Health Course’ (RASH) aims to equip Christian healthcare practitioners and others to:

        • Improve knowledge of the healthcare needs, responses and challenges for refugees and asylum seekers in the UK
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        • Inspire creative ways to engage with health systems for better provision, support, and care

        View the full programme here.

        The programme is an interactive learning experience led both by those who have been refugees and those who are healthcare professionals in this field. Local charities or churches working with refugees and asylum seekers will also find this day useful. If you encounter people from outside the UK in your everyday practice, then this is the day for you.

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        Time

        January 10, 2026 10:00 am - 4:30 pm(GMT+00:00)

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        London

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        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NLYarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

        30jan01febStudent Conference 2026

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        Select:ID Who are you? It is a fundamental question to answer as you start your journey as a health professional. The world has a lot of answers, you are your

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        Select:ID
        Who are you?

        It is a fundamental question to answer as you start your journey as a health professional. The world has a lot of answers, you are your job, your sexuality, your gender, or your racial and national identity. But the gospel of Jesus tells us that we are forgiven, we are chosen, we are beloved, we are made holy, and we are God’s own treasured possession. How do we live out that truth in our everyday life, our studies, and our careers?

        Join us at CMF’s Student Conference – from 30 January to 1 February 2026 (Yarnfield, Staffordshire)

        If you’re a Student, here’s our top tips for booking
        1. Grab a cup of tea, and have a read to choose four seminars you would like to attend, look through your options in our Conference Programme.

        2. Now you’re ready to book onto Student Conference 2026.

        Thanks to generous donations, extra subsidies may be available to help students attend the Student Conference. If any bursary is available, we’ll be in touch — any support will be arranged as a refund after the event.

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        2. If you have happy memories of your time at Student Conference, and if you would like to invest in the next generation of Christians healthcare professionals please use the donation form:

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        January 30, 2026 5:00 pm - february 1, 2026 3:00 pm(GMT+00:00)

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        Yarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

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        05mar8:00 pm9:00 pmChristians in Healthcare Leadership Spring Webinar 2026 - How to Raise Concerns

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        Open to all CMF Members 8 – 8.05. Introduction 8.05 – 8.15 Loving the individual, but hating the sin: Lessons from the woman at the well 8.15 – 8.30 Raising concerns: Avoiding the negative

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        Open to all CMF Members

        8 – 8.05. Introduction

        8.05 – 8.15 Loving the individual, but hating the sin: Lessons from the woman at the well

        8.15 – 8.30 Raising concerns: Avoiding the negative and positively influencing culture

        8.30 – 8.45 Counting the cost: Institutional whistle blowing & Dealing with lack of insight

        8.45 – 9.00 Discussion and prayer

        Registration now, you will receive the Zoom details nearer to the event. 

         

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        Time

        March 5, 2026 8:00 pm - 9:00 pm(GMT+00:00)

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        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NLYarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

        07may(may 7)3:30 pm08(may 8)5:00 pmNAMfest 2026Dressed in Christ and ready for work

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        Dressed in Christ, ready for work Thursday 7 - Friday 8 May 2026, Yarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre, Staffordshire, 

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        Dressed in Christ, ready for work

        Thursday 7 – Friday 8 May 2026,

        Yarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre, Staffordshire, ST15 0NL

        Bookings go live in January, watch this space…

        The Nurses and Midwives team can’t wait to see you at NAMfest 2026

         

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        May 7, 2026 3:30 pm - may 8, 2026 5:00 pm(GMT+00:00)

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        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NL

        Yarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

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Primary care chaplaincy

Gordon Macdonald looks at how to address the spiritual needs of patients in general practice

Most patients accept they are more than their bodies, that they have an inner part of their life. They function as ‘dualist interactionists’, experiencing a fusion of body and soul, as opposed to the ‘ghost in the machine’ described by Ryle. (1) Many are directly aware of the bi-directional relationship between their physical health and their inner well-being. While they may not have articulated such thoughts, once highlighted they are often accepted as self-evident.

It is not uncommon in general practice to encounter patients who, through a complex interplay of physical disease, multimorbidity and functional decline, experience significant social isolation. Such patients know all too well the results that each of these physical ‘losses’ have on their inner life, with many living with loss of well-being or mental health issues. Conversely, doctors frequently see patients who, through traumas of their inner life or soul, present with physical manifestations such as hypertension, cutaneous reactions, headache or gastrointestinal symptoms to name but a few.

We should not be surprised by this, as Scripture has long since spoken of these truths. There are several examples of how the physical affects the spiritual. The story of Bartimaeus highlights how physical affliction can remove autonomy, diminish dignity and compromise an individual’s deepest inner needs of security and purpose. (2) In Luke’s Gospel, we see how a sense of identity and community was lost for the man with leprosy through his exclusion. (3) However, the greatest impact of the physical illness, in these stories was the individual’s separation from public worship.

We instinctively agree with the psalmist as he describes the effect of unconfessed sin on his physical state. (4) We read with encouragement of our physical revival as we wait on the Lord. (5) Finally, as believers we acknowledge with Paul the inevitability of physical decline and the supremacy of Christ and his work of inner renewal. (6)

Primary care chaplaincy is one way to speak these truths to patients. ‘Davie’ is a case in point. A man in his 60s, he has served time for murder but now lives alone. His wife supported him and brought up their children. Sadly, she died ten years ago leaving Davie devastated with guilt – she was no longer there and no longer able to say she forgave him. He presented to me with anger, loss of well-being (as opposed to depression) and was increasingly nihilistic and isolated. His physical symptoms of pain were consequently magnified. We spoke of his deepest inner needs, his need for security and forgiveness and that these may not be met in the biomedical paradigm. He was referred to see our practice chaplain to talk about these spiritual needs and he continues to receive support.

Primary care chaplaincy (in a soundbite) is ‘a talking therapy, provided by chaplains in general practice, with the aim of helping people find meaning for their deepest inner needs, in the midst of suffering and to provide spiritual direction.’

We started offering a chaplaincy service in our surgery in 2008 and have provided over 1,600 appointments with nearly 10% of the practice list having attended at some point. Our model of chaplaincy is based on a fusion of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs and Hanlon’s ‘modern maladies’. (7),(8) We have summarised Maslow’s peak needs as being those deepest inner needs of significance, security and self-esteem and ultimately transcendence. We have found these three ‘S’s (of significance, security and self-esteem) to be a helpful way of identifying ‘cues’ within a consultation and opening up a pre-chaplaincy conversation that facilitates a referral. We also find them a useful aide memoire and way of promoting understanding amongst colleagues, trainees and undergraduates. In practice, these three ‘S’s are frequently evidenced by one of Hanlon’s modern maladies.

Hanlon describes how we have moved through several waves of public health – starting with the great public works (such as the clean water supply) through germ theory and its application, on through social reform and its impact on health, and then to the risk factor theory of disease and consequent control of such risk. Through each of these waves, Hanlon points out that the human condition has been increasingly dichotomised with body and soul being separated and the importance of the soul, of consciousness, of aesthetic and of individual value being eroded. He argues that the current prevailing philosophical societal values of reductionism, individualism, consumerism and economism have fuelled this dichotomy and created the ‘crisis of modernity’ with resulting modern maladies. These modern illnesses are defined as loss of well-being (as distinct from depression), obesity, addictive behaviours and depression or anxiety. If we pause to think, it is clear how such prevailing philosophies could result in such maladies; if for example I derive comfort from what I consume, it can be seen how obesity and addiction develop. If beauty, choice or community are no longer possibilities, it is evident how well-being could be affected. Such modern maladies can either function as an independent long-term condition or as a consequence of the other long-term conditions we so frequently face. As clinicians, we use each of these maladies as a marker highlighting the unmet needs of significance, security or self-esteem and of the potential benefit of a chaplaincy referral.

Chaplaincy appointments last up to one hour and provide patients with a rapidly accessible well-being / spiritual care service that meets the ideals of continuous, coordinated and comprehensive care, increasingly required in our primary care teams. (9) Patients, as we know, are complex and often require multiple appointments and multiple ‘interventions’. Key interventions such as listening with generosity while being a ‘compassionate presence’. Henri Nouwen, psychologist and Catholic priest, spoke of this ‘compassionate presence’, which emanates from a ‘wounded healer’. Such a wounded healer is a self-aware practitioner, who is consequently non-judgemental and can provide not merely empathy, but rather overflows with the love they have received. Surely these are key attributes not only of our chaplains, but also of the resilient practitioners we are all encouraged to be.

Thankfulness is also helpful. What are the signs of life for which patients can be grateful? We have found that practical help can open up the way for deeper connections and input. So frequently the advice given is very practical, on problem-solving and helping patients understand the consequences of positive and negative actions. Fundamentally though, chaplaincy is a place where spiritual direction is available; a search for meaning, particularly in the midst of suffering; a search for the sacred and a pointing beyond one’s self to a transcendent other. Prayer is frequently accepted as part of this journey.

As with any new service, confidence grows as evidence of efficacy accumulates. We have been able to publish some evidence that highlights the place of primary care chaplaincy. We have shown that patients who attend chaplaincy (as the sole therapy) have an improvement in well-being that is comparable to that of antidepressants. (10),(11) A follow-up study has shown a reduction in GP appointment utilisation among those attending chaplaincy. This study also highlighted that chaplaincy was responsive to a wide variety of presenting symptoms including ‘loss of well-being’. This ‘loss of well-being’ is related to the undifferentiated presentations we regularly need to respond to in general medicine. So it is helpful to see how chaplaincy is beneficial for this group of patients. Finally, chaplaincy was also seen to be a useful intervention for those with multimorbidity, a presentation now so common in primary care.(12)

Whilst these results are encouraging it is the narrative feedback that remains most important – what patients tell us. ‘It gives me great comfort’; ‘I can cope better with what’s going on’; ‘It re-affirmed I have not failed God.’ These quotes point to so many wonderful stories of healing and restoration that confirm this model of whole person care.

Our experience is that like Bartimaeus or the person with leprosy; many patients’ ultimate suffering is not their physical decline but rather their spiritual isolation from God. We see in 1 Kings 19 that Elijah’s restoration was part physical provision and part spiritual encounter. Our hope is that chaplaincy, when embedded within primary care, allows physical and spiritual care to happen concurrently. Our desire is to see this service replicated in other surgeries, and ideally supported by the local church. It is recognised that chaplaincy must work within NHS spiritual care guidelines, but it seems clear that as we walk this line, we are well placed to share God’s common grace which points to his goodness and restoring power. (13),(14)

Author details

  • Gordon Macdonald

    CEO of the Care Not Killing Alliance

    View all posts

Related Publication


  • Triple Helix – Spring 2019

Key Points

  • Most people we care for are aware of a spiritual/ existential aspect of their health problems, but do not always know how to articulate it.
  • Likewise, Christians working in primary care know how spiritual issues affect health, but there are not always clear pathways to address these needs appropriately in the community setting.

Related Articles


  • Including spirituality in clinical care

  • You are not your mistake: Compassionate responses to clinical errors

  • Resilience

  • Marriage as a medic

  • Patients are people too

References

  1. Ryle G. The Concept of Mind. University of Chicago Press, 1949
  2. Mark 10:46-52
  3. Luke 5:12-16
  4. Psalm 32:3
  5. Isaiah 40:29-31
  6. 2 Corinthians 4:16
  7. Maslow A. A theory of human motivation. Psychological Review 1949;50:370-96
  8. Hanlon P, Carlisle S, Hannah M, Reilly D, Lyon A. Making the case for a ‘fifth wave’ in public health. Public Health 2011; 125:30-36.
  9. Starfield B. Primary Care: Concept, Evaluation, and Policy. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992
  10. Macdonald G. The efficacy of primary care chaplaincy compared with antidepressants: a retrospective study comparing chaplaincy with antidepressants. Primary Care Research and Development Journal July 2017; 18(4):354-365
  11. Macdonald G. Primary care chaplaincy: a valid talking therapy? British Journal of General Practice February 2017; 67 (655):77
  12. Macdonald G. Primary care chaplaincy: an intervention for complex presentations. Primary Care Research and Development Journal October 2018; 8:1-12
  13. Scottish Government Department of Health and Wellbeing 2008: Spiritual care and chaplaincy in NHS Scotland CEL 49, SGDH. Guidelines on Chaplaincy and Spiritual Care in the NHS in Scotland, Annex A Paragraph 5-17. bit.ly/2GmmCIM
  14. NHS Chaplaincy in England, described in NHS Chaplaincy Guidelines 2015: Promoting Excellence in Pastoral, Spiritual & Religious Care. NHS England. bit.ly/2WW1M83

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Privacy Policy

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Join CHLN

The Christian Healthcare Leadership Network (CHLN) is an initiative of the Christian Medical Fellowship (CMF). To be eligible to join the network, you need to be registered with CMF as a Member/ Associate Member or CMF Friend. If you are not already registered as any of the above, please sign up to a member or a friend of CMF before proceeding with your application to join CHLN.
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The Christian Healthcare Leadership Network is an initiative of the Christian Medical Fellowship (CMF). To be eligible to join the network, we ask that you are a registered CMF Member/ Associate Member or CMF Friend.
Please confirm that you are a CMF Member or CMF Friend.(Required)

You can update your contact preferences at any time. We take your privacy seriously and will not give your data to any other organisation for their own purposes. For more information see cmf.org.uk/about/privacy-notice

You can update your contact preferences at any time. We take your privacy seriously and will not give your data to any other organisation for their own purposes. For more information see cmf.org.uk/privacy-notice/

Contact the Pastoral Care Team

Pastoral Care is a member benefit for those who join CMF. If you want to access this support, contact us using the form below and we will arrange a telephone call. We aim to get back to you as soon as possible, but we are not a crisis service, and there may, therefore, be a short delay in our response.

Please note, sadly we do not have the capacity to offer this service to non-members.

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We will add them to our daily prayers. Please respect patient confidentiality.
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You can update your contact preferences at any time. We take your privacy seriously and will not give your data to any other organisation for their own purposes. For more information see cmf.org.uk/privacy-notice/

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You can update your contact preferences at any time. We take your privacy seriously and will not give your data to any other organisation for their own purposes. For more information see cmf.org.uk/about/privacy-notice

You can update your contact preferences at any time. We take your privacy seriously and will not give your data to any other organisation for their own purposes. For more information see cmf.org.uk/privacy-notice/

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