Lindsay B. Carey

ORCID: 0000-0003-1120-7798
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Religion, Spirituality, and Psychology
  • Religion, Society, and Development
  • Grief, Bereavement, and Mental Health
  • Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
  • Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Research
  • Theological Perspectives and Practices
  • Food Security and Health in Diverse Populations
  • Biblical Studies and Interpretation
  • Dysphagia Assessment and Management
  • Religion and Society Interactions
  • Voice and Speech Disorders
  • Ethics in medical practice
  • Migration, Health and Trauma
  • Tracheal and airway disorders
  • Optimism, Hope, and Well-being
  • Suicide and Self-Harm Studies
  • Childhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life
  • Stuttering Research and Treatment
  • Family and Disability Support Research
  • Multicultural Socio-Legal Studies
  • Tourism, Volunteerism, and Development
  • Cultural Competency in Health Care
  • Homelessness and Social Issues
  • Nursing Roles and Practices
  • Torture, Ethics, and Law

La Trobe University
2016-2025

Victoria University
2023-2025

Victoria School of Management
2025

Federation University
2023

University of Notre Dame
2022-2023

Google (United States)
2020

University of Tasmania
2006

Technical College of the Lowcountry
1996

Specialist palliative care, within hospices in particular, has historically led and set the standard for caring patients at end of life. The focus this care been mostly with cancer. More recently, health social services have developing equality all approaching This done context a service delivery approach to whereby become increasingly expert identifying need meeting professional services. model patient centred impeccable assessment treatment physical, social, psychological spiritual need,...

10.1136/bmjspcare-2012-000359 article EN BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care 2013-03-05

Moral injury is a complex trauma related syndrome involving correlation of biological, psychological, social, and spiritual symptoms that can have substantial impact upon health well-being. This paper argues for holistic bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach to moral injury, by including chaplaincy in the screening treatment among actively serving military members retired veterans. As part process, alignment with World Health Organization's Spiritual Intervention Codings, new technique...

10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00619 article EN cc-by Frontiers in Psychiatry 2018-12-05

This article will consider a practitioner's experience of the impact COVID-19 on spiritual care within aged at McKellar Centre, Barwon Health, Victoria, Australia. Using Sulmasy's (2002) paradigm, provision holistic be considered in terms physical, psychological, social and service variations that were necessary order to continue provide for health wellbeing most vulnerable society – namely those care. The WHO Spiritual Care Intervention codings (WHO, 2017) utilized specifically explore...

10.1558/hscc.41243 article EN other-oa Health and Social Care Chaplaincy 2020-05-15

This study presents a community chaplaincy evaluation of pastoral narrative disclosure (PND) as structured intervention for addressing moral injury (MI) among individuals who have experienced morally injurious events. Pastoral is an evidence-based, eight-stage counselling, guidance and education framework that integrates the principles both adaptive confessional narrative. Previously, PND training was evaluated exclusively Australian military chaplains (n = 201; Carey et al., 2024). In...

10.1558/hscc.32620 article EN Health and Social Care Chaplaincy 2025-01-30

Jamieson, N. (2023). Darkest Before Dawn: Australian Veterans’ Accounts of Moral Injury. Canberra: Amazon Books Australia, 141 pp. (pbk). ISBN: 9781962464482.

10.1558/hscc.32964 article EN other-oa Health and Social Care Chaplaincy 2025-01-31

This issue of Health and Social Care Chaplaincy presents research regarding the work Ukrainian military chaplains at war. It also findings from Australian Moral Injury Skills Training (MIST) Pastoral Narrative Disclosure (PND) programme for health social care caring veterans and/or first responder personnel on how to address issues relating their occupational moral injury. In line with these topics, this considers chaplaincy within healthcare context providing support families experiencing...

10.1558/hscc.32959 article EN other-oa Health and Social Care Chaplaincy 2025-01-31

We propose new definitions for moral injury and distress, encompassing many prior definitions, but broadening to more general classes of victims, in addition perpetrators witnesses, distress include settings not involving institutional constraints. relate these notions each other, locate them on a "moral trauma spectrum" that includes considerations both persistence severity. Instances which is particularly severe persistent, extends beyond cultural religious norms, might be considered...

10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1422441 article EN cc-by Frontiers in Psychology 2025-03-05

This paper summarizes the views of Australian health care chaplains concerning their role and involvement in patient/family treatment decisions. In general terms findings indicated that majority surveyed believed it was part pastoral to help patients families make decisions about treatment. Differences volunteer staff chaplains, Catholic Protestant, male female are noted, as perspectives chaplaincy informants regarding relation Some implications this study with respect quality patient...

10.1080/08854720802698491 article EN Journal of Health Care Chaplaincy 2009-03-17
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