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Spiritual Health

Spiritual health is important to a person’s well-being. It should be a part of each person’s healthcare plan.
About

Spiritual health is an important part of people-centred care that includes all dimensions of a person: spiritual, physical, mental, emotional, and social.

Watch our video to better understand spiritual health care and learn how to access this service if you are a BC Cancer patient, family member, or caregiver.

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People diagnosed with cancer may have spiritual health needs. They may start looking for ways to:

  • Find meaning and purpose in life
  • Express themselves
  • Connect to their faith or beliefs.

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Spiritual distress

Spiritual distress is a conflict between your belief system and your current reality. It is when your core spirituality is challenged and you do not have spiritual well-being.

Spiritual distress can happen when:

  • You are waiting for a diagnosis.
  • You have a major setback or complications.
  • You are in pain or are suffering.
  • Your beliefs do not support the treatment your health care team has recommended.
  • You are wishing for a ritual of faith, such as prayer or having Communion.

Spiritual distress can also affect family members and caregivers of people with cancer. It can often happen if you are:

  • Responsible for making hard or life-changing decisions for your loved one.
  • Experiencing compassion or caregiver fatigue.

Spiritual Care

Spiritual Care is a holistic approach to healthcare. It values and affirms spirituality and faith as part of healing. We support patients and families during their cancer care. We help connect them to their spiritual resources and practices.

Spiritual Care for Indigenous Patients

At BC Cancer we recognize Indigenous spirituality and cultural backgrounds, traditional ceremonies, practices and traditions, are integral parts of holistic healing.   Our Indigenous Patient Navigators can connect our Indigenous Patients (Métis, First Nations and Inuit) to Elders in various regions throughout the province, and you can also request traditional healing, practices, and medicines.  To speak with an Indigenous Patient Navigator please fill out the referral form, or ask a member of the Health Care Team to refer you.

IPN-referral-form.pdf (bccancer.bc.ca)

Visit Indigenous Cancer Control for more information. 

Groups

The Role of Redemption in Suffering

This creative and experiential workshop series has been designed for patients who are wishing to have a deeper understanding of spiritual and philosophical perspectives on suffering while trying to find notes of redemption amidst a difficult experience. Led by BC Cancer's Multi-Faith Spiritual Health Practitioner, each participant will be gently guided through the turbulent waters of suffering, while being provided with perspectives to help both validate and/or perhaps reframe their understanding and experience of suffering and tools to help cultivate inner resources for resilience. The workshop is open to people of all communities, cultural backgrounds, faiths, religious and non-religious traditions.

The workshop, on Zoom, will have five sessions, each two hours long. Each session will have a mix of education and discussion, as well as creative and spiritual exercises that are accessible to a wide variety of participants. There will be some light home practice, where participants will be asked to reflect on certain questions prior to class.

Sessions are on Tuesdays from 2-4pm. Only 10 spots are available for this session. Register by January 15, 2025.

Register

January 28 - Horizons: An Overview of Suffering from different Spiritual Perspectives

February 4 -  Lament: The Roar of our Grief

February 11 - A Light in the Darkness: Meaning Making amid Suffering

February 18 - Oasis in the Desert: Reclaiming Territory One Seed at a Time

February 25 -  Hope & Faith: Dubious Shapeshifters or Trusted Allies? 

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