Challenged to Care
A Report on the 16th Quadrennial
Congress of NCFI, July 4 – 9 2004, Seoul, South Korea
Written by Steve Fouch
Anyeong Haseyo - Greetings from Korea! This was the sixteenth gathering
of the Nurses Christian Fellowship International (NCFI) since it was
founded in 1957, and drew together some 379 delegates from 33 nations.
The Conference aimed to explore the biblical basis of caring; to build
and strengthen Christian values as a foundation for knowledge and
practice in nursing; and to explore and challenge the context of
Christian nursing practice in the 21st Century.
The Christian Medical Fellowship sponsored three of the CNM committee
to attend the conference – Angela Thavaraj, Tim James and Steven
Fouch. This was a great opportunity for CNM to re-connect with
the global Christian nursing community.
The concepts of leadership, scholarship and servanthood were integrated
throughout the conference program in specific seminar and academic
“tracks”. The mornings consisted of a Bible exposition and a
linked plenary session exploring the issues of “Care of the Caregiver”,
“Globalisation, Health and Nursing”, “The Paradigm Shift in Nursing”
and “Nursing and Diversity”. The afternoons were split between
hour and half seminars, and twenty minute academic paper presentations
on issues as diverse as “The Relationship of Suicidal Ideation,
Depression and Spiritual Well Being of Korean Adolescents” to an
application of the Book of Job in dealing with spiritual pain in the
terminally ill, using Kubler Ross’ model of grief. There were
many papers on Spiritual care, but also on as diverse a range of topics
as HIV care delivery and aseptic practice by Nigerian nurses, to
developing family health nursing in Uzbekistan.
Dr Kim Mo Im, past president of the International Congress of Nurses
(ICN) was the keynote speaker for the opening ceremony. Other key
speakers included Dr Suzie Kim (Florence Nightingale International
award winner at ICN 2001), Dr Judith Allen Shelly (outgoing Editor of
the Journal of Christian Nursing), Professor Barbara Parfitt (Dean of
Nursing at Glasgow Caledonian University), and Kamalini Kumar of Mercy
Medical Centre, Clinton Iowa.
NCFI is structured around six regions (Caribbean & North America
[CANA], Latin America, Europe, Africa, Central Asia & Middle East
[CAME], and Pacific & East Asia [PACEA]). The largest region (in
both geographical and membership terms) is PACEA, and was also, given
the location, the most represented at the Congress. However,
Africa, CAME, CANA and Europe all had good sized delegations, although
Latin America was only represented by one delegate, for geographical
and linguistic reasons (the conference was held exclusively in English,
with the only parallel translation facilities being into Korean).
Highlights
The first thing that struck me was the high level of scholarship in the
Bible expositions, plenary sessions and paper presentations.
However, it was also highly applied research, and when one heard the
background of the people presenting the papers, one realised how much a
Christ centred focus on care had shaped their entire lives, not just
their professional practice.
One of the big challenges was the call for nurses in general, and
Christian nurses in particular, to have a role in shaping national and
global health strategies and priorities, and the need to challenge a
market driven approach to healthcare provision that reduces healthcare
to mere service delivery, marginalises the poor and sidelines the
issues of public health. These are all areas where nurses are in
a key position to challenge the current paradigm in global healthcare,
but where we are mostly excluded from the process.
Almost all the national fellowships that I talked to are facing similar
problems to CNM – lack of committed members, difficulty finding people
to work on the committee, how to keep in touch with and encourage
students, etc. Even the larger fellowships struggled with
this. The issues are pretty global, not specific to UK or NHS
culture!
Spiritual care was very high on the agenda – varying from US and
Australian groups who have done extensive research and developed models
of care that are Biblical and highly professional. It would appear that
there is a lack of knowledge about spiritual care in the UK, how to
practice it, or even how to assess and evaluate the care given.
One encouragement was from Linda Ross, who showed that Christian nurses
are addressing the issue, while secular nursing bodies are hopelessly
lost in either rigid, superficial and religious definitions of
spirituality, or wandering off on vague and irrelevant New Age models
of spirituality.
One very striking moment was in the final plenary session on
diversity. The leader of the delegation of Japanese Christian
nurses, Fukushima Chieko, got up to explain her reasons for attending
the conference. These were in large part to offer an apology to
the Korean people, and especially to her Korean colleagues and
Christian sisters and brothers for their treatment at the hands of the
Japanese during the occupation of the first half of the twentieth
century. The deep hurts that the Koreans have felt towards Japan
are not dissimilar to those felt by Jews towards Germany, and to hear a
group of five Japanese nurses standing in front of several hundred
Korean nurses and apologising in Korean for the suffering caused by
their fathers and grandfathers during the occupation, was something
that will be hard to forget. The impact was profound on all those
present. Koreans were going forward and embracing the Japanese,
then the Fijian and Papua New Guineans (who also suffered badly under
the Japanese) doing likewise. It was deeply moving, and there was
real sense of being on Holy Ground – that God was right there in the
midst of the reconciliation that was going on in the meeting.
Another great encouragement was the six Mainland Chinese nurses who
were in attendance – this was the first time NCFI had had any delegates
from the Chinese mainland. There were significant ethnic Chinese
delegations from Hong Kong, Taiwan, Malaysia and Singapore as
well. That it was at all possible to get the Mainland Chinese to
the Congress was an achievement in itself, and the hope is that this
will be the first spark of a Chinese NCF coming to life in the next
decade.
A final personal highlight was Korean hospitality. The food was
not to everyone’s taste certainly (raw fish, pickled vegetables
(kimchi) and rice noodles with every meal), although I personally loved
it, but the warmth of welcome was wonderful, especially the groups of
student nurses who met us at the airport, guided us around and helped
us throughout the conference. Angela even got to enjoy a Korean
church service in one of the more “medium sized” churches in Seoul (35
– 40,000 congregation on a Sunday morning). My abiding memory of
Seoul is of a huge, bustling, vibrant city that was at the same time
very friendly and welcoming, and of a strong a vibrant Christian
community that has helped shape modern Korea for the better.
Implications for CNM and Student Work
One thing that cropped up over and over again was how encouraged people
were to see three delegates from the UK (there were seven actually,
including Barbara Parfitt of NCF Scotland and Linda Ross of the
University of Gwent, who were presenting papers). That there was
a new England/Wales fellowship starting was a great encouragement to
many that I talked to. Many of the West Africans (especially from
Ghana) had been deeply hurt when the original English NCF had closed
down twelve years ago. I met a group of Fijian nurses who had
been specifically praying on a daily basis over the last few years for
a new fellowship to get off the ground in England/Wales. It is
both a privilege and a responsibility to be part of the answer to such
fervent prayer!
We made contact with NCF groups in Nigeria, Fiji and the Philippines
who all have members here in the UK, and we hope to build links with
these Christian nurses over the coming year. With the vast influx
of nurses from Africa and Asia to the UK, many of them being
Christians, there is considerable scope to develop a more international
Christian nursing group across the country. Many will be isolated
and away from home for the first time, some will have little or no
Christian fellowship and friendly face and point of contact will
do a lot to help them feel at home and find their feet. Furthermore,
with concerns about the global impact on the health of the poor of this
migration, and its implications for world mission, this will be an
initially small but significant development.
We have built stronger links with the European Region of NCFI.
There is to be a European Region Conference in 2006 in Ede, the
Netherlands (August 22-26) on theme of Ethics and Spirituality.
This is being organised with three nominally Christian nursing schools
by Dr Bart Cusveller. This will be a key event to bring CNM and
CSNM (Christian Student Nurses and Midwives) members to.
As a result, we have far closer connection with NCF Scotland, NCF
Europe and NCFI as a whole. We are in discussions with Harry
Louden (NCFI Director) on seeing CNM become a full member of NCFI over
the course of the next few years.
Conclusion
It was certainly worth the time and energy and expense of going to the
conference. Without the financial support of CMF, it would not
have been possible, and it was of far more value to have three
delegates who could each follow different contacts and get different
emphases out of the conference than to send just the one. We even
managed to have an impromptu publications meeting and outline the next
eighteen months worth of CNM News and commission a few articles in the
space one dinner break! Watch this space for the results.
We are working closely with NCFI on membership, on promoting the 2006
European Conference (see CNM Notice Board) and we are looking forward
to taking a bigger delegation (including students) to the 17th Congress
in Abuja, Nigeria in 2008!