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ELCANEWS  November 2001

ELCANEWS November 2001

Subject:

ELCA Issues First Draft of Statement on Health, Health Care

From:

News News <[log in to unmask]>

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Date:

Fri, 9 Nov 2001 11:02:19 -0600

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (148 lines)

Title: ELCA Issues First Draft of Statement on Health, Health Care
ELCA NEWS SERVICE

November 9, 2001

ELCA ISSUES FIRST DRAFT OF STATEMENT ON HEALTH, HEALTH CARE
01-280-FI

     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- "Health, Healing, and Health Care: First Draft
of a Social Statement" is now available on the World Wide Web and will
be available within weeks from Augsburg Fortress Publishers, the
publishing house of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA).
The document is the first draft of what could become an official policy
of the ELCA in 2003.  It is one step of a four-year study process.
     The board of the ELCA Division for Church in Society (DCS)
authorized distribution of the first draft when it met Oct. 18-20 in
Baltimore.  Each of the ELCA's 10,816 congregations, as well as pastors
and lay leaders serving in other settings, will receive a single copy of
the document by Dec. 31.  A Spanish version will be available by the end
of the year.
     ELCA members are to offer their responses to the draft by Sept. 1,
2002, so they may inform the development of a proposal for the assembly.
The draft includes a response form.
     "Advances in public health practice and biomedical technology have
brought improved health, cures for some diseases and longer lives for
many people," says the introduction.  "The pursuit of health also
presents difficult issues to individuals, society, and the Church.  For
example, gains in biomedical science do not automatically translate to
the kind of healing care or knowledge that people seek."
     "As members of the ELCA, and as a corporate body, we support a
health care system that embodies a full understanding of health, healing
and illness; access to the system for everyone; understanding health and
healing as both individual and social responsibilities; ongoing struggle
with the moral dilemmas of the wise use of technology; and continuous
examination of the roles and responsibilities of the church," says the
draft statement.
     "Being bold witnesses to the need for caring for the health and
healing needs of all people is a fundamental mission of the church. We
are called to be advocates in society for those individual and
collective actions that promote health, prevent illness, and ensure care
for those who suffer," says the draft.
     The document is divided into six sections and a conclusion.
     After a preface and introduction, the first section is "Health,
Illness, and Healing in Biblical and Lutheran Theological Perspectives."
It says Christians consider humans to be a combination of body, spirit,
soul and community, so "health care and healing services should attend
to the physical, mental, spiritual and communal dimensions of a person's
well-being."
     "Illness is an individual's experience of a diminished sense of
health" in all of health's dimensions, says the draft.  "Healing seeks
to restore health.  Healing is related to a restoration of the fullness
of life and peace that God promises and that can be distinct from or
more than cure," it says.
     "Healing is also a gift which is intimately related to God's
redemptive work," says the draft statement.  "Like healing, God's
salvation begins now and includes the whole person, both body and soul."
     The draft's second section, "A Vision of Health Care," involves
seven subheadings: health care as shared endeavor, health care system,
provider-patient relationships, caregivers, technology, research and
education.  The subheading on a health care system includes a part on "A
Comprehensive Health System," which addresses population-focused
services and whole-patient care.
     "Population-focused public health refers to those services taken
on behalf of the entire community to prevent epidemics, limit threats to
health, promote healthy behavior, reduce injuries, assist in recovery
from disasters, and ensure that people have access to needed services,"
says the draft.  It presents "whole-patient care" in segments on curing,
other approaches to healing, healing without cure, palliative care --
which reduces symptoms and provides comfort -- and peaceful dying.
     "We favor development of a health care system that has the
explicit purpose of continuously promoting and improving the health of
the people; reducing the impact and burden of illness, injury and
disability; and promoting healing as its needs are occasioned by the
lack of health, even when cure is not possible," says the draft
statement, outlining "one image of what an integrated system could be."
     That image of "a comprehensive health system is built upon
prevention and is sustained by a continuous cycle of mutual support
among individuals, families and caregivers," says the draft.
     The third section is called "Access and Equity in Health Care."
It makes several biblical references, saying, "At the center of Lutheran
ethics is agape, a love that 'does no wrong to a neighbor' but seeks
instead to use the 'world's goods' especially for the 'brother and
sister in need.'"
     "We therefore are responsible to promote the health and healing of
our neighbors, as God intends these good gifts for all people.  We may
love people differently as needs require, but we love our neighbors
through serving their needs, including and perhaps especially their
health care needs," says the draft statement.
     "Each person should have ready access to comprehensive, basic
health care," it says.  "Our Lutheran ministries of health care and
other charitable organizations can supplement the current care system to
attend to those often left out.  This charity can never be sufficient,
however, and we remain obligated to call out for justice."
     "Individual Responsibilities" are addressed in the fourth section.
"Health is not merely for living well, but for the broader purposes of
worshiping God and serving God and neighbor.  This principle should
guide one's thinking and behavior in regard to one's own health," it
says.  One should work to prevent illness, but, when illness comes, one
should seek health with the help of others, says the draft.
     "We also have a responsibility to participate in the health care
system in such a way that does not waste health care resources or
diminish what is available to serve the basic health care needs of all
persons," says the draft statement.  "As good neighbors, each of us has
opportunities to provide informal care (such as meals or
transportation), prayer, and emotional support for one another and for
all caregivers in our circle," it says.
     The draft's fifth section, "Ethical Guidance," says Lutheran
ethics and decision making are based on such concepts as "doing no
harm," being good stewards of God's gifts and seeking justice in the
distribution of health care resources.
     "The Roles of the Church in Health Care" are outlined in the sixth
section as they are played out in congregations, social ministry
organizations and advocacy.  "For the Church, a ministry of healing is
not optional.  It is an activity that expresses our faith in the power
of God both to create and to save," says the draft.
     "Advocacy within the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is an
expression of Christian witness on behalf of the neighbor, especially
those living in poverty or illness," it says.  "Continuing advocacy on
health issues is one expression of the shared endeavor of health in the
community and is based on existing social policy statements."
     The draft statement has a one-paragraph conclusion: "It is
important that we go forward, maintaining the tension between lifting up
the centrality and importance of health and illness as human concerns
for all people everywhere and resisting the temptation to encompass all
of life and well-being under the concepts and obligations of health
care.  Within this tension we express gratitude for the gifts of lifeand health, and offer ourselves out of love and justice to seek health
and healing for all people as children of God."
     The document ends with implementing resolutions and endnotes.
     An ELCA churchwide assembly must adopt a proposed social statement
on health and health care for it to become an official statement of the
church.  The next assembly is in Milwaukee in August 2003.  The
implementing resolutions suggest the directions the assembly could give
various units of the church to carry out the statement's intent.
     The Division for Church in Society assists the ELCA in considering
moral issues, prepares social statements and messages, coordinates the
church's world hunger and domestic disaster response programs, relates
to 280 social ministry organizations through Lutheran Services in
America, develops education and program resources on social issues, and
coordinates the ELCA's advocacy with state, national, and international
governmental bodies and with institutions in the private sector.
-- -- --
     The Division for Church in Society maintains information about the
studies it is conducting at http://www.elca.org/dcs/projects.html on the
ELCA Web site.

For information contact:
John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or [log in to unmask]
http://listserv.elca.org/archives/elcanews.html

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