Catholic Health Association of the United States

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.