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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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      • the trouble with opt-outs

        December 1, 2025
        Read more
        https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/organ-donation.jpg 240 400 Trevor Stammers https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png Trevor Stammers2025-12-01 08:00:492025-11-27 13:23:42the trouble with opt-outs

        Three-parent embryos: can the end ever justify the means?

        August 12, 2025
        Read more
        https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/AdobeStock_1252305052-scaled.jpeg 1440 2560 Dr Rick Thomas https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png Dr Rick Thomas2025-08-12 08:00:412025-08-08 10:29:05Three-parent embryos: can the end ever justify the means?

        The Leng Review and the leadership void: A call to fill the gap

        August 8, 2025
        Read more
        https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/AdobeStock_1292854122-scaled.jpeg 1705 2560 Steve Sturman https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png Steve Sturman2025-08-08 08:00:392025-08-08 10:33:25The Leng Review and the leadership void: A call to fill the gap
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        10jan10:00 am4:30 pmRASH: Refugee and Asylum Seeker Health Course, London

        Event Details

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

        Event Details

        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
        • Hear examples of good practice
        • Foster a dialogue among those working with refugees and asylum seekers for mutual encouragement and support
        • 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.

        more

        Time

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

        Location

        London

        CalendarGoogleCal

        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NLYarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

        30jan01febStudent Conference 2026

        Event Details

        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

        Event Details

        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. Get your Student Discount Code.

        If you have you joined CMF it will be able to access it via the member portal. If you are not yet a member you can join here

        3. 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.

        For non-Students
        1. If you’re a Medical School Link coming with a group of students, please select the Med School Link Ticket on the booking form
        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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        Time

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

        Location

        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NL

        Yarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

        CalendarGoogleCal

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

        Event Details

        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

        Event Details

        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. 

         

        more

        Time

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

        CalendarGoogleCal

        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NLYarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

        08may(may 8)6:00 pm10(may 10)2:00 pmNational Conference 2026

        Event Details

        Save the Date! Bookings will open in January 2026 for this conference...more details are coming soon.

        Event Details

        Save the Date!

        Bookings will open in January 2026 for this conference…more details are coming soon.

        Time

        May 8, 2026 6:00 pm - may 10, 2026 2:00 pm(GMT+01:00)

        Location

        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NL

        Yarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

        CalendarGoogleCal

      • See all events
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      • https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Cover.png 503 359 Steve Fouch https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png Steve Fouch2025-10-17 14:46:542025-11-06 20:06:28Triple Helix – autumn 2025
        https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Freshers-Nucleus.png 610 424 Steve Fouch https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png Steve Fouch2025-09-05 14:54:582025-09-05 14:54:58Freshers’ Nucleus 2025
        spotlight summer 25 front cover
        https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/spotlight-24-thumbnail.png 742 741 Kevina Kiganda https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png Kevina Kiganda2025-07-30 12:24:522025-07-30 12:24:52spotlight summer 2025
        https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/CMFFile78Thumbnail.png 1056 752 christianmf https://www.cmf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/CMF-Logo-MONO-TRANSPARENT-340px.png christianmf2025-11-03 13:58:142025-11-06 20:48:28CMF file 78 – ethics: a matter of principle
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Reviews – Triple Helix – Winter 2018

The Language of Kindness:

A Nurse’s Story

Christie Watson

 

  • Chatto & Windus, 2018, £9.65, 336pp, ISBN: 9781784741976
  • Reviewed by Steve Fouch, Head of Communications at CMF

 

Sometimes I forget what a huge privilege it was to be a nurse. Sitting with the dying, being there at the birth of a new life, helping people navigate through mental illness, disability and rehabilitation.

Then you read something like The Language of Kindness, and you get jolted out of the everyday and into the reality of what it means to be a part of this amazing profession.

Watson takes us through her story; stumbling into nursing almost by chance, discovering the reality of human suffering going on all around us, but hidden from most people’s gaze. She takes us through all her training placements, her first staff jobs and on to her long-term career as a PICU nurse.

Littered with facts, figures and details to explain to the lay reader what is going on, the book explores the minutiae of life in the A&E, the dark sense of humour of the staff room, and the exhaustion of completing a third twelve-hour shift in a row. It lays bare the smells, the mess, the pain and despair, as well as the hope, joy, relief and the stories of human kindness in the midst of suffering with which each day confronts nurses.

This is not a Christian book – although Watson picks up on some biblical texts, especially around the issue of human dignity. You won’t agree with all she says, but it moved me profoundly, reminding me of all that I loved (and hated) about being a nurse.

 

 

 

Dying Well

John Wyatt

 

  • IVP, 2018, £9.99, 192pp, ISBN: 9781783594856
  • Reviewed by Steve Fouch, Head of Communications at CMF

 

Increasingly hidden from public view, medicalised and privatised, death and the process of dying have been progressively removed from ordinary life. The health professions and the church have colluded with this according to the premise of this book. John Wyatt argues that this has been to our detriment, as dying can be a time of growth, healing and reconciliation and that in marginalising death we have lost so much.

Digging back into Scripture, to the ancient church tradition of ars moriendi and his own clinical experience, Wyatt’s book is a much needed antidote to the modern marginalisation of this universal human experience. In actively engaging with impending death, we can deepen our faith, help others come to terms with our departure, and find fresh spiritual depth in our living.

Full of hope, practical advice, biblical depth and personal testimony, Dying Well is going to be indispensable to pastors, chaplains, medics, nurses and others involved in the care of the dying. But above all, it is something that every Christian needs to read and engage with as we look to our own future hope in Christ, and to coming to terms with our own mortality.

 

 

 

Walking with Domestic Abuse Sufferers

Helen Thorne

 

  • Inter-Varsity Press, 2018, £7.99, 112pp, ISBN: 9781783595952
  • Reviewed by Claire Wilson psychiatry trainee and MRC Clinical Research Fellow, King’s College London

 

Taking readers through the journey of the domestic violence victim, from disclosure to recovery, this short book is written for those who may find them themselves supporting survivors of domestic abuse. It also discusses how to support perpetrators.

We will likely come in to contact with patients affected by domestic violence throughout our careers. Indeed, as a psychiatrist, my patients with mental disorders are disproportionately affected both in terms of victimisation and perpetration.

What should be our response as Christians? Thorne offers practical advice on how we can walk alongside all those affected. She helps the reader make sense of domestic violence within a biblical framework of suffering. She outlines the warning signs and ways in which victims may present, as well as some of the thought processes of victims and perpetrators. She then offers insights in to how to effectively support disclosure, escape from the abusive relationship and know ultimate healing. This is an essential read for all Christian health professionals.

 

 

 

Psychiatric Medication & Spirituality

An unforeseen relationship

Lynne Vanderpot

 

  • Jessica Kingsley publishers, 2017, £14.43, 240pp, ISBN: 9781785921261
  • Reviewed by Stefan Gleeson, Consultant Psychiatrist & Director of Medical Education in Hampshire

 

This book has received some positive reviews in the USA, where the pharmaceutical industry holds some sway over medical practice, raising questions of professional practice. Based on a qualitative study of 20 patients with mental disorders, identifying themselves as,’ religious/ spiritual’. It is essentially a critique of the reductionist care of patients. There is a useful emphasis on narrative construction by patient and doctor; reflections on how medication impact on patients’ spiritual development and disturbing examples of unacceptable practice.

If, as the author suggests, it is true that the majority of the American population is on some form of psychotropic medication, then the book is a timely warning against the pharma industry dictating what goes on in the consulting room. The training and practice of psychiatry in the UK is more predicated on Karl Jasper’s emphasis on ‘listening’ to the patient and the bio-psycho-social (& spiritual) systems formulation than the author suggests.

Vanderpot states that she does not wish to make generalisations from such a small sample of patients. She seeks to present negative and positive narratives of patients’ medication journeys, taken from a spiritual angle. However, I would guard against generalisations as she has not included the most acutely unwell in their social context, and just as not every doctor is correct, neither is every patient always correct in their interpretation. Still a useful, albeit disconcerting, read.

 

 

 

 

 

Mad or God?

Jesus, the healthiest mind of all

Pablo Martinez & Andrew Sims

 

  • IVP, 2018, £6.89, 208pp, ISBN: 9781783596058
  • Reviewed by Peter May, a retired GP and author of The Search for God

 

This is an important and original book. Two psychiatrists have worked together to examine Christ’s mental health. Taking their cue from CS Lewis’ trilemma that Jesus was either mad, bad or God, they investigate Christ’s life and behaviour with professional expertise.

Did this Man of Sorrows show signs of depression? Did his mood and character fluctuate? Is there any evidence that he was deluded? Ruling out major pathology, they then look for personality disorders, relationship difficulties and reactions under stress.

What did his teaching reveal of his intelligence and sanity? Was his life consistent? Did he practice what he preached? Was he volatile or unbalanced? Did he form good friendships? What did his conversations reveal? What impact did he have on others? Did he have any moral flaws? How should we rate his moral teaching? How did he relate to women? How did he cope with misfits, enemies, authorities, the weak and the scheming? And what was he like under pressure, facing false charges, torture and an agonising death?

Jesus actually presents us with a quadrilemma, for many believe he was really a myth. But this compelling figure was far beyond fictional imagination: he had the healthiest mind of all.

 

 

 

Broken but blessed

Journeying from pain to peace with unlikely guides

Rebekah Domer

 

 

  • Plough Publishing, 2018, £10.56, 138pp, ISBN: 9780874867633
  • Reviewed by Janet Goodall, retired consultant paediatrician based in Stoke-on-Trent

 

This little book contains the spiritual equivalent of clouds holding silver linings. The author is a hospice chaplain who structures her book around the eight beatitudes (Matthew 5: 1-12). Disabled herself, she enters into the sufferings of others in a sensitive way, concluding that suffering is intended to transform us by bringing us closer to Christ. It is Jesus’s love that enriches the poor in spirit, comforts those who mourn, honours the humble and satisfies the spiritually hungry and thirsty. Those so blessed by his love will show mercy, approach God with purified hearts and convey his peace to others. Even those reviled and persecuted for their faith will be enabled to rejoice in the hope of a heavenly welcome ahead.

The ‘unlikely guides’ of this book range from a joyful sister with complicated Down’s syndrome, through to those grieving over various kinds of dashed expectations, to a street pastor ministering to those hungry for healing and discovering the meaning of mercy. Each beatitude is appropriately illustrated by someone Domer has met. All of us are likely to suffer in some way; even if dented rather than broken we are still in need of healing. These stories encourage us to look for blessings around the bruises. Jesus provides the supreme example as he endured the cross for the joy set before him.

 

 

 

Pregnancy and Abortion

Your Choice

Dr Mark Houghton

 

  • Malcolm Down publishing, 2018, £7.00, 208pp, ISBN: 9781910786802
  • Reviewed by Greg Gardner, a GP in Smethwick

 

Attempting to be both easy to read and scholarly, this book succeeds in both objectives. Written in an easily accessible style and with short chapters, the first part of the book explores the way choices are made. Sections on parenting, adoption, abortion, teenage pregnancy, and ‘men and abortion’ fill in some of the detail.

Six chapters later, various long-term sequelae of abortion are presented. The ones on long- term maternal mortality, and mental health have helpful charts. There is a good review of abortion and the risk of subsequent preterm birth by John Wyatt. The book is well referenced. The author set himself a huge task by trying to cover as much medical ground as possible. There are 238 references in total with many primary sources.

The dedication page is ‘to all pregnant women and their near relations.’ The book would be good to recommend to pregnant women faced with difficult choices as well as pregnancy counsellors, GPs, obstetricians and trainees for those specialties, church leaders, researchers, journalists and politicians. It would be a helpful addition to any church or medical library.

If the material in this book is kept updated it could become a primary source of information for anyone trying to get deeper into this big subject.

Author details

  • Matt Peters
    Matt Peters

    Matt works for WebFX in London and is currently working on the CMF web project. This will be replaced with the actual author in due course.

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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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Would you like to join our monthly prayer WhatsApp group? If so please provide your mobile phone number below
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.
Include information on whether you would like to get some mentoring or become a mentor

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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