Diocese of Fall River, Mass.
F riday , February 7, 2014
At left, students from All Saints Catholic School in New Bedford take part in the recent annual Greater New Bedford Catholic Schools Challenge, a day-long event at Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth, where seventh- and eighth-grade students participated in a series of academic, athletic and creative competitions in a fun and engaging environment. The program was run by Stang students, faculty and administration. At center, Bishop George W. Coleman processes into St. Mary’s Church in Mansfield, where he recently celebrated a Mass for students in the Greater Attleboro and Taunton areas who had gathered for the Liturgy. At right, students process into the Mass carrying banners identifying their schools.
Mass. lawyer ‘cautiously optimistic’ about Mass. buffer zone appeal By Christine M. Williams Anchor Correspondent
BOSTON — A local lawyer who helped craft the challenge to Massachusetts’ 35-foot buffer zone law, heard before the United States Supreme Court on January 15, said he is “cautiously optimistic” that the law will be overturned. “The consensus is that the case will be reversed,” Phil Moran told those gathered at the Massachusetts Citizens for Life Assembly for Life on January 26. “To say that it was exciting to be there for the historic case would be an under-
statement.” The law, enacted in 2007, criminalized Pro-Life speech within 35 feet of an entrance, exit or driveway of an abortion clinic. It prevents people from approaching women contemplating abortion in order to provide them with support, information and practical assistance, Moran said. “The petitioners try to position themselves near the clinics in an attempt to reach this unique audience at a unique moment,” he said. Turn to page 13
The scene outside The Anchor offices in Fall River after one of several winter storms to hit the Diocese of Fall River this week. (Photo by Dave Jolivet)
Hospice and palliative care offer support for patient and family By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff
FALL RIVER — When Penny Gosson, lead Hospice volunteer coordinator at Steward Health Care in Fall River, began her work in Hospice care in 1983, there was a general misconception about what type of patient received such care. “I think in the beginning, people thought Hospice was just for patients who have cancer, and it’s really not,” said Gosson. “It’s for anyone with a terminable diagnosis for any disease.” Hospice and palliative care provides medical services, emotional support and spiritual resources for people who are in the last stages of a serious illness, and also provides additional support services for families. Hospice and palliative services are not intended to speed up or prolong the dying process; the focus is instead on relieving
pain and other symptoms. Caregivers are concerned with enhancing the quality of remaining life by keeping a patient as comfortable as possible in a familiar environment. At Our Lady’s Haven in Fairhaven, the nursing home has its own palliative care program that works alongside a Hospice agency of the patient’s choosing, said Cheryl Ann McMullen Jolin, R.N., who has been a case manager for 16 years. Having a Hospice agency offers “another set of people with our people, working together to make the most of the [patient’s] life they’re living,” explained Jolin. “We’re not focusing on their dying. What we’re focusing on is the moment — getting them comfortable, seeing what they want to make their days comfortable. We try hard.” The skilled nursing home provides the nursing care and meets all the patient’s
needs, including social services, spiritual, pain management, while “we bring the agencies in and they provide an extra layer,” said Jolin. “We meet with the whole team, the nurse, social worker, chaplain and CNAs. We meet once a week with them so that we’re all on the same page, and we develop a plan of care. They provide a lot of support.” Denise Benjamin has been an assistant chaplain at St. Luke’s Hospital in New Bedford and said that the support is key; “It’s the most common need.” And while the number of Hospice and palliative care patients she sees varies from week to week, Benjamin says her biggest challenge is “when a patient is close to death and is not conscious, and some family members want spiritual care and others don’t; trying to meet the needs of the family when they’re not all on the same page. We
don’t go in with an agenda.” Sometimes the moments are heartbreaking, like when a family or patient questions, “why?” “It’s just why? Why this person? Why is this happening to them? In any suffering, we ask why — why is God allowing this?” said Benjamin, who cannot offer an easy answer. “Sometimes I don’t give any answer. Sometimes they just need to go through that process.” And for devout Catholics, the process often involves an inner struggle over understanding what the teachings of the Church are regarding the sanctity and dignity of human life. “A lot of the questions I’ve dealt with, especially when I was full-time in the ministry, a real challenge for people is certainly the issue of extraordinary means, such as Turn to page 18