4.2 Article

Volunteers in palliative care: A healthcare system-wide cross-sectional survey

期刊

BMJ SUPPORTIVE & PALLIATIVE CARE
卷 12, 期 E1, 页码 E83-E93

出版社

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjspcare-2020-002321

关键词

communication; psychological care; social care; spiritual care; supportive care; nursing home care

资金

  1. Flemish government agency for Innovation by Science and Technology (Agentschap voor Innovatie door Wetenschap en Technologie) (SBO IWT) [140009]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study aims to describe organized volunteering practices in palliative care across different healthcare settings, including tasks, training, supervision, and volunteers' evaluations. The results show that dedicated palliative care volunteers tend to provide multidimensional support, while sitting service volunteers focus more on practical support. Training and consistent supervision are needed for volunteers to offer complementary support to patients with serious illnesses, especially in nursing homes and community home care settings.
Objective Volunteers are an important resource in bridging palliative care (PC) services and communities. However, no studies have systematically mapped volunteers' actual contributions to PC provision and how well they are supported by healthcare services at the volunteer level. Such insights are important to shape and optimise supportive environments for volunteering in PC. This study aimed to describe organised volunteering practices in PC across dedicated PC services and healthcare services providing generalist PC, in terms of tasks, training, supervision and how volunteers evaluate these. Methods A cross-sectional postal survey of 2273 volunteers from healthcare organisations providing care for people with serious illnesses in the Flemish healthcare system (Belgium) was conducted between June and November 2018. A two-step cluster randomised sample was used. Volunteers were recruited through their respective volunteering organisations. Results Response was obtained for 801 (35.2%) volunteers. Volunteers were predominantly women (75.5%), retired (70.8%) and aged 60-69 years (43.4%). Almost all volunteers provided psychosocial care (96.3%). Volunteers were found to provide either (1) broad volunteer support, emphasising psychosocial and existential care and signposting tasks or (2) narrow volunteer support, emphasising nursing care tasks. Nursing home volunteers had the lowest prevalence of PC training (7.7% vs 53.7% total, p<0.001). Conclusions Multidimensional support was most prevalent among dedicated PC volunteers, while practical support was most prevalent among sitting service volunteers. Results indicate that volunteers can offer complementary support for patients with serious illnesses, although this requires training and consistent supervision. This is currently suboptimal for volunteers in nursing homes and community home care.

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