Veteran care always comes first at VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System (VAPHS). Despite many pandemic-related changes, staff in all services, including chaplains, adapted creatively by finding innovative and meaningful ways to continue providing care.

“When COVID-19 arrived in Pittsburgh, we asked ourselves, how will we best minister to patients and directly support our vulnerable health care co-workers?” said VAPHS Chief of Chaplains Paul Dordal.

Chaplain standing in front of stained glass in a chapel

Army Veteran and VA Pittsburgh Chief of Chaplains Paul Dordal (2018 photo)

Chaplain David Shortt provides religious support with Catholic Mass and interdenominational worship services in the H.J. Heinz III campus Community Living Center (CLC) rather than in a formal chapel setting.

“As I do ministry on the CLC units, I find it’s becoming more intimate and personal because of the smaller groups,” said Shortt. “The Veterans get to know me and I get to know them more closely. There is no longer the larger crowd, but there are still people who want to understand their spirituality more deeply.”

During a livestreamed town hall in August, VAPHS Director Donald Koenig acknowledged the chaplains’ work.

“Our chaplains have been phenomenal. They sit with Veterans and an iPad so families can spend some time with their loved ones,” he said.

Connecting virtually

Chaplain Gretchen Hulse provides tele-ministry for Veterans and families at death, one of the hardest times for all relationships.

“I am honored to help facilitate tele-video encounters between patients on our COVID isolation units and their families,” said Hulse. “One Veteran’s health was rapidly deteriorating. I was able to offer spiritual care and support as the family wrestled with the reality that their loved one was likely not going to survive to the end of the week.”

Hulse brought a smart tablet to the Veteran’s unit and coordinated with the family for a tele-video call where over 20 extended family members saw their loved one and said final goodbyes.

“In this way, the family could let him know they were with him,” said Hulse. “Chaplains are uniquely positioned to provide meaningful, personal connection in a time when so much fear and grief abound.”

Chaplain Sharieda Patterson, the lead chaplain at the H.J. Heinz III campus, provides inpatient and outpatient care to primary and home care Veterans using VA Video Connect.

A stained glass window brightens a chapel.

“We have assisted Veterans who are on home hospice and their families remain connected during the pandemic,” said Patterson.

She also helped create the primary care chaplain telephone clinic to meet needs of specific Veterans.

“We created the telephone clinic specifically for those Vets who neither have nor want smartphone technology or feel they are not tech savvy,” said Patterson.

Caring for those who serve Veterans

In addition to caring for patients, VAPHS chaplains serve fellow staff and each other, too. Heinz campus chaplains meet weekly to support and pray for each other. One chaplain resident felt anxious when the pandemic began, “but found peace and a new zeal to continue the good work we are so blessed to do,” said Patterson.

“Our charge is not only to care for Veterans, their families and staff, but to each other,” said Patterson. “Ours is a ministry of humility and service. I am so very proud to serve alongside other chaplains who have answered the call to serve.”

Chaplain Katie Maul visits staff regularly to extend care.

A stained glass window in the chapel.

“As a part of my work week, I’ve had the honor to participate in team huddles and spend more time with doctors, nurses, EMS (Environmental Management Services) workers and a slew of other VA employees to check in with them and see how they’re doing,” said Maul. “Our staff here at VA Pittsburgh have been great, they continue to show up, putting care for our Veterans first.”

Like other chaplains, Maul feels called to be a “calm amidst the storm” in the face of overwhelming fear and uncertainties.

“Sometimes I encounter staff who seem beside themselves with stress and worry,” she said. “I spoke with a nurse who shared how prayer and meditation were a calming source and seemed to bring strength. So as requested by this staff member, we prayed. I can be a supportive presence, offering spiritual care and reminding Veterans and staff they are cared for and not alone. It’s humbling work we do and it’s an honor to be part of this mission.”

“When crises come, we will always be there.”

Dordal says he is proud to see his team continue serving, walking the floors and visiting intensive care units. Chaplains have helped families say goodbye to loved ones through video conferencing; provided rites and rituals many depend on for solace; ministered to stressed and grieving staff who faithfully serve in their health care roles; and expanded their reach to many outpatients who could not come to the hospital, according to Dordal.

“Throughout our response to the pandemic, I have not heard one chaplain say to me, ‘I can’t do it anymore,’” said Dordal. “Instead, we continue asking, ‘What else can we do to serve our country’s Veterans and their caregivers?’”

An Army Veteran, himself, Dordal served as a chaplain during combat in the Iraq War.

“Chaplains maintain a calm, non-anxious and nonjudgmental presence throughout the hospital for the benefit of all people, regardless of faith or spiritual beliefs. For those called by their higher power to serve as chaplains, when crises come, we will always be there,” he said. “This health care crisis is similar to combat in the sense that wherever the hurting are, wherever the wounded are, wherever those who die are, there you will find a chaplain.”


Hope Nelson is a public affairs specialist at the VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System.

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