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Health and WellnessHealing for Wholeness Care for the sick and dying was crucial for the early community both in France and in America. Hospitals were few and medical care was rudimentary at best. When typhoid or smallpox struck, as it did in Ottumwa in the 1880s, religious women such as the CHMs, sprang into action. They visited the sick in their homes, walked the railroad begging money for medicine; comforted the dying until their last breath. They were the first wave of home health care workers, bringing such common sense practices as boiling water and washing hands. Institutional Connections. St. Joseph Hospital in Ottumwa was the Humility community’s full-service hospital and was renowned both for its medical care and for its nursing program. Later Marycrest College helped pioneer the 4-year nursing degree, graduating thousands of certificated nurses and medical professionals to serve a multi-state region.
Today, facilitating the health and well being of persons of all ages is central to the mission of many Sisters of Humility:
A Holistic ApproachWellness is more than the absence of disease; it empowers individuals to take charge of their psychological, emotional and spiritual well-being. CHMs are massage therapists, Reiki masters, 12-step counselors and nutrition advisors. To keep their own life in balance, they participate in yoga, Tai Chi, gardening, music and a variety of fitness activities from swimming to biking to power walking. Among their number are:
Stories about Sisters of Humility in healthcare ministries > |