Publications in OpenAlex of which a co-author is affiliated to this organization
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| Title | DOI |
|---|---|
| Community benefit is no one's job (it's everyone's job). | |
| A rich tapestry, weaving in commitment. | |
| Bridging the mission-business gap in health care. How can Catholic health ministries close the gap between business and mission? | |
| Report cites need for better integrated spiritual care. | |
| Riding out the recession. | |
| Poverty and health: connections that can spark a dialogue. | |
| All God's sick children. One city's response to the flu pandemic of 1918. | |
| Planning for community benefit. A seven-step process helps providers define and address important needs. | |
| Are you registered? | |
| Leadership and the core commitments. | |
| Thoughts on the Papal allocution. | |
| Are futility policies the answer? Caregivers must improve communication with patients and their families. | |
| https://doi.org/10.1080/00243639.1987.11877924 | The Catholic Moral Tradition on Providing Food and Fluids |
| Let's look ahead, prepare for trends. | |
| The mission imperative: our foundation and market advantage. | |
| What does the vision mean for health ministry? | |
| Leadership formation: choosing between the compass and the checklist. | |
| Technology: a moral evaluation. Ethical questions on the use of technology from a macro and micro perspective. | |
| The renaissance of pastoral care. | |
| A threatened privilege. | |
| Does community-oriented mission fit with health reform? | |
| Genetics and ethics. Issues and implications of the Human Genome Project. | |
| Conversations at the end of life. | |
| The theology of community benefit. Our tradition obliges us to reach out beyond our hospital walls. | |
| A values-guided "downsizing". A St. Louis System tried to put its employees' welfare first. | |
| Reducing the number of uninsured. | |
| Managing change. A step-by-step process helps sponsors implement change smoothly. | |
| Genomics and the ministry: the executive perspective. Four leaders of Catholic health care organizations offer their opinions. | |
| A shared history of "doing what needs to be done". | |
| Catholic identity: a unifying force. | |
| https://doi.org/10.1093/ajhp/13.1.21 | Education Number |
| https://doi.org/10.1097/01974520-199401000-00004 | The Un-Managed Competition Revolution |
| Care management: quelling the confusion. Case managers help clients access resources appropriate to their needs. | |
| Cooperating with philanthropic organizations. How to assess the moral permissibility of a Catholic health care organization's involvement. | |
| A "second generation" of ministry leadership. | |
| Catholic identity, Catholic integrity. A shared faith allows religious and laity to live out their commitments in one another's company. | |
| Assessing, addressing community health needs: steeped in Catholic identity and history. | |
| https://doi.org/10.1179/002436308803889675 | Moral and Ethical Considerations of Organ Transplantation |
| https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1945-1474.1998.tb00267.x | Comparative Data Analysis Using Collaborative Skilled Nursing/Long-Term Care Indicator Assessment |
| https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1945-1474.2000.tb00134.x | Preserving Residentsʼs Rights in Long-Term Care Settings: A Values-Based Approach to Restraint Reduction |
| Leaders encourage the heart. | |
| https://doi.org/10.1300/j080v06n01_06 | Praying with the Terminally Ill |
| https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1556-6978.1975.tb00992.x | Equalizing Opportunity: Training Indigenous Personnel as Mental Health Counselors |
| https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0028-4289.2004.0intro.x | The Hiddenness of God |
| The ethics of the ordinary. | |
| Protecting patient self-determination. New legislation requires healthcare providers to inform patients of rights regarding advance directives. | |
| Strategies for disaster readiness. | |
| https://doi.org/10.1080/00185868.1995.9950573 | The Hospital Revolution |
| https://doi.org/10.1177/004056390907000324 | Book Review: Retrieving the Natural Law: A Return to Moral First Things |
| https://doi.org/10.1080/00221546.1947.11775606 | A Well-Documented Study: Franciscan Education and the Social Order in Spanish North America (1502—1821) |
| https://doi.org/10.1080/00963402.1988.11456152 | Catholics debate papal nuclear shift |
| https://doi.org/10.17688/ntr.v28i2.1225 | <i>Ethics and the Elderly: The Challenge of Long-Term Care</i> |
| Coverage crisis continues; local advocates take action. | |
| https://doi.org/10.1080/20508549.2002.11877655 | Sodomy or “Homosexuality” |
| Antitrust and IDNs (integrated delivery networks): how far can we go? | |
| A wondrous history of community benefit. | |
| Twenty-five years later: Cardinal Bernardin's consistent ethic of life. What it still means to Catholic health care. | |
| To the Rue du Bac, by way of the internet. | |
| Preparing communities to be healthy, resilient. | |
| Health care reform: a political and policy balancing act. Finding middle ground on three hot-button issues will determine if new comprehensive legislation is enacted. | |
| Organization ethics: a guide. Sustaining a commitment to mission and core values. | |
| Learning from the Guyanese. | |
| Human dignity in the workplace: "an inconvenient truth". | |
| New resource aids discernment of the critical relationships in sponsorship. | |
| A new center for spirituality and leadership at Bon Secours Richmond. | |
| The next step: framing the progress. | |
| Issues beyond 'the usual suspects'. | |
| Understanding ethics calls for a glossary. | |
| Medical mission and immersion trips: is intent dovetailing outcomes? | |
| Community benefit guidelines born of shared experience. | |
| Meeting mission challenges in IDNs. Through integrated delivery networks, organizations can continue their ministry and extend its reach. | |
| We know what we value. Measuring it is up to us. | |
| The hows and whys of conducting a community needs assessment. | |
| A new branch on the P3 tree. | |
| Catholic teaching and disparities in care. Our ministry is perfectly positioned to lead the struggle against inequities in health care. | |
| Making handoffs work. | |
| Building a community of leaders in Illinois. | |
| Divisive discourse has deep roots. | |
| Catholic health care's community-benefit role. | |
| There's no place like home...whether it's a place, or a space within. For seniors, love and care may compensate for loss of home. | |
| What's a Catholic to think? A genomics that promotes human flourishing can extend Jesus' mission. | |
| A voice against physician-assisted suicide. | |
| A synergy of values. Catholic healthcare leaders must implement their organization's mission and model its values. | |
| Naming and claiming our unique character. | |
| Congressional conversations: horse slaughtering or poverty and health care? | |
| Journey into sponsorship's future. Trinity Health's public juridic person develops a formation program for prospective members. | |
| Scripture's paralytic and our mission. | |
| Medicaid--a moral matter. | |
| Compliance group posts best practices archive. | |
| "Freedom to serve" is not a lawyer's quibble. | |
| Strong motive for reform. | |
| As momentum builds, principles give voice to ministry priorities. | |
| Ramping up ethics' role: it is at the heart of health care mission. | |
| Charitable formula. Catholic hospitals more clearly define how they measure community benefit. | |
| Learning to act on behalf of justice. | |
| Integrating ministerial leadership at Provena Health. | |
| Communication strategies vital to vision, mission. | |
| Health care ethics: changes on the way. | |
| Teaching in Africa: medical ethics Zimbabwe-style. | |
| New opportunities for mission leaders. CHA survey indicates emerging responsibilities, skills. |
