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The Open University

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Exploring the working role of hospice volunteers The Open University Dr Jacqueline Watts Senior Lecturer, The Open University BSA MedSoc Conference, Chester – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Open University


1
Exploring the working role of hospice volunteers
Dr Jacqueline Watts Senior Lecturer, The Open
University BSA MedSoc Conference,
Chester September 2011
The Open University
2
Context
  • Voluntary work, as uncommodified work, is shaped
    by diverse motivations altruism, community
    involvement fostering sense of self in the
    world
  • Growth of voluntary sector due to increased cost
    of buying in services from the formal economy
    (Noon Blyton, 2007)
  • Different types of voluntary work
    career/casual, formal/informal,
    occupational/non-occupational (Stebbins, 1996)
  • Volunteering evokes different forms of
    commitment, identification allegiance (Newman
    Mooney, 2004)
  • Partnership between voluntary sector, government
    business has resulted in the professionalisation
    of much voluntary work

The Open University

3
Hospice services in the UK
  • 716 hospices in-patient palliative care units
    in the UK, most with registered charity status
    (Watts, 2010)
  • Services day care, bereavement counselling,
    complementary therapy, day and night sitting
    services, respite and terminal care
  • Intimacy at scale
  • Multidisciplinary approach to care leads to mixed
    staffing profile doctors, nurses, social
    workers, chaplains, physiotherapists volunteers
  • Managers from the business sector often now
    recruited to head up the hospice operation

 
The Open University
4
The Study
  • Aim to develop understanding about motivation
    and experience of working as a hospice volunteer
  • Setting large well-established English hospice
  • Mixed methods focus group with 8 participants
    and 2 semi-structured interviews
  • Small-scale pilot study to inform the design of a
    larger research project

The Open University
5
Participants
  •  
  • All women
  • Age range 41 to 77 years
  • None in paid work
  • Variety of volunteer roles represented
    receptionist, coffee shop assistant, day care
    worker, bereavement counsellor complementary
    therapist

The Open University
6
Motivation to volunteer
  • Giving back a gift to be earned repaid
    (Sinclair, 2007)
  • Temporal structure to weekly routines
  • Socially useful work
  • Opportunity to develop friendships and have
    social contact
  • Maintain skills developed in professional role
    prior to retirement
  • Gain experience to support application onto a
    qualifying social work programme at local
    university

The Open University
7
Training Support
  • Induction initial training mandatory death
    education, principles of palliative care,
    understanding grief loss, team working, ethical
    principles
  • Ongoing formal support from supervisor
  • Informal peer support from co-volunteers greatly
    valued
  • Regular updates including education sessions
  • Deficit areas diversity (particularly cultural
    and religious difference) and spirituality/spiritu
    al care (what is it and should this just be left
    to the chaplain?)

The Open University
8
Challenges for volunteers
  • Emotionally demanding work
  • Increased scrutiny accountability paralleling
    the paid work model
  • Rise in managerialist approach
  • Less flexibility
  • Valued but also taken for granted

The Open University
9
Challenges for Voluntary Service Managers
  • Volunteers who wont leave or retire from their
    volunteer career (Hamilton, 2009)
  • Lack of cultural diversity in the volunteer
    workforce
  • Constraints on budget resources for education,
    training and support of volunteers

The Open University
10
The future of hospice volunteering
  • Hospices cannot continue to provide the current
    level and breadth of services without the ongoing
    contribution of volunteers
  • The volunteer roles of emotional comforter,
    spiritual supporter, palliative caregiver
    therapeutic healer represent a division of
    healing labour greatly appreciated by service
    users
  • Voluntary work in the hospice sector looks likely
    to increasingly draw on practices from the paid
    labour market including annual appraisals and
    satisfaction reviews (OBrien Wallace, 2009)

The Open University
11
A concluding comment
Whilst the hospice setting for this research
sees volunteers as essential to service
provision, Sheldon (1997) notes that in some
hospices volunteers are positioned as
handmaidens to the professional team and can be
resented because of the substitution of
volunteers for tasks previously undertaken by
professionals.
The Open University
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