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Spirituality & Stigmatization: Ministering to people living with HIV

Spirituality & Stigmatization: Ministering to people living with HIV. Jim McManus, CPsychol,MFPH,MEPS,DipPsych Assistant Director, Health Improvement. jim.mcmanus@bdpct.nhs.uk. Methodology. See –the situation Judge – salient issues Act – principles for pastoral response

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Spirituality & Stigmatization: Ministering to people living with HIV

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  1. Spirituality & Stigmatization:Ministering to people living with HIV Jim McManus, CPsychol,MFPH,MEPS,DipPsych Assistant Director, Health Improvement jim.mcmanus@bdpct.nhs.uk

  2. Methodology • See –the situation • Judge – salient issues • Act – principles for pastoral response • Theological reflection using case study and Lectio if time

  3. 25 Years of HIV London is historically the epicentre of the UK Epidemic

  4. Some Key Issues • The unique clinical features as well as the stigma and discrimination that surrounded the early HIV epidemic led to the establishment of stand alone services where patients were managed by specialists. • However, the escalation in the number of individuals seen for HIV care, together with increases in complex patient management, has put pressure on existing HIV services. These pressures have been felt not • Between 2004 and 2005,the increase in individuals seen for care outside London was almost double that of the capital (17% versus 9%).

  5. A simplified psychosocial model for stigmaProtective and vulnerability factors Services Loved ones Friends Workplace Church Stress assessment Positive Stress Eustress Distress Self Value and Identity Challenges from illness Challenges from perception of illness, death, life as compromised Guilt Challenges from Society Challenges from Faith

  6. Acting on These • Protective Factors • Key things which will help people develop and retain positive sense of self • Help people make positive assessment of stressors • Key examples: managing a working life while on HART (managing the stressors well can improve life quality and health) • Vulnerability Factors • Factors which predispose us to be vulnerable to stigma or illness • Act on these to reduce or neutralise them • Help person see and work through them • Key examples: disfigurement or smoking behaviour and progression of HIV infection

  7. A Theological Analysis to Stigma - Summary • The ministry of Christ – to reach out and include • The role of the Church – sacramental community • Societal Level • Parish Level • Individual Level • Teaching of Benedict XVI

  8. Motifs in Pastoral Care responding to Stigma • Unite to the Cross – a good pedigree but this might reinforce the worries and fears during disease progression so need a context in which it is appropriate • Call to Life and wholeness • Jesus in the Synoptic Gospels • Individual pastoral care without any social action is not authentically Catholic • Reformed Theology in recent years • UNAIDS Theological Commission • Piece of Lectio

  9. Two key questions • Is HIV theologically special in and of itself, or is it what we make of it that makes it so? • Stigma • Structural and social sin – inequalities • Not listening to the Gospel or Tradition • Given our Catholic heritage of teaching, why are we listening to Reformed theology when we haven’t yet bottomed out what our own tradition may have to say?

  10. A Catholic Theology of HIV 1 • The person in the perspective of an economy of grace • HIV and AIDs as illnesses in the perspective of the • From Scripture through Tradition • Take the person with HIV seriously – moral and doctrinal theology • Taking the person with HIV seriously means we have some tasks in Catechesis, Sanctification and Pastoral Care • Taking the person seriously means taking the person in their “economy of Life” • Taking the person seriously means engaging with Social Theology and with society and its institutions

  11. A Catholic Theology of HIV 2 • The nature and dignity of the human person • The redeeming work of Christ • The healing ministry of the Church • Illness as Challenge and as opportunity • Human life as lived in eschatological perspective • Joy and Justice • The Sacraments • The Church as Sacrament - Schmaus • The Doctrine of Human Ecology – John Paul II • Touch, Incorporate, Uphold – Benedict XVI • Jesus in the Synoptic Gospels – uses then goes beyond the traditional socially sanctioned models of prophetic and healing ministry

  12. Some Theological Conclusions • A Christology of HIV • Unite to the Cross is a sign of Hope, not just a sign of passive suffering • The ministry of Jesus – dealing with the individual and the social context • A Pneumatology of HIV • A truly Catholic response to HIV builds upon a sacramental economy of grace to create a pastoral response which helps people LIVE with HIV, even in the face of death • This provides a place for a theology of the Cross which Reformed Theology around HIV does not seem to do

  13. Pastoral Response Secular and Christian Agenda • What – Sanctification • How – Build resilience and discipleship • Psychological dimension of sanctification - can be seen as a means of building protective factors and reducing vulnerability factors • Example of Jesus in the Gospels • Sacraments • Five Functions of Pastoral Care • Creating an understanding of acceptance • Creating a welcoming parish community • Knowing the limits of your own competence • Picking the main issues you can impact on • Use of the Optio Fundamentalis • Self awareness and self care on the part of the Pastor Biological Social Spiritual Psychological

  14. Some Starting Points for Parish and Area Level • …with respect to the fundamental rights of the person, every type of discrimination, whether social or cultural, whether based on sex, race, colour, social condition, language or religion, is to be overcome and eradicated as contrary to God’s intent • Gaudium et Spes • It is essential for every human being to have a sense of participating, of being a part of the decisions and endeavours that shape the destiny of the world. • World Day of Peace Message 1985 • It is a strict duty of justice and truth not to allow fundamental human needs to remain unsatisfied, and not allow those burdened by such needs to perish. It is also necessary to help these people to acquire expertise, to enter the circle of exchange, and to develop their skills in order to make the best use of their capacities and resources • Centesimus Annus http://www.ncan.org

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