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On the other hand, all of our guests agree that chaplains are often the most vulnerable to being cut from hospital and health system budgets. We welcome all professions, including but not limited to physicians, chaplains, social workers, nurses, nurse practitioners, case managers, administrators, and pharmacists. Karen: Thank you.
We’ve got social workers, we’ve got chaplains, we got nurses who can do the human piece. What should we do as nurses, as physicians, as social workers, as chaplains? And my concern in palliative medicine becoming a specialty was and kind of saying, yeah, no, we’re a multidisciplinary team. What do we do?
Alex 01:01 And we’re delighted to welcome back to the podcast Naomi Saks, who is a palliative care chaplain, assistant professor in the D ivision of P alliative M edicine at UCSF and D irector of I ndividual and C ollective W ell-being for the H ospice and P alliative M edicine f ellowship at UCSF. Ishwaria, welcome to GeriPal.
So I was really excited to bring in a couple of co-editors who were young and hip, and at the cutting edge of palliative care now, along with my collaborators: the social workers, the psychiatrist, a chaplain to really make this book relevant for now. Janet: And you could put the liquid methadone in the feeding tube, can’t you?
For GeriPal, it’s really to bring geriatrics and palliative care together. We’re a clinician-facing podcast, nurses, doctors, social workers, chaplains, et cetera, primarily researchers. Alex: Apparently the one of me doing the flossing dance, that didn’t draw in the viewers…that didn’t do it.
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