This paper seeks to explore the tension between professionalization and volunteerism in health care. It focuses on the role of volunteers who provide bereavement support services within hospices and palliative care services. The paper draws on evidence from a study of hospice bereavement volunteers conducted in New Zealand. Interviews with 34 co-ordinators, and questionnaires completed by 121 volunteers, from 26 hospices, provided data about the role played by bereavement support volunteers. Differences in the perspectives of co-ordinators and volunteers highlight the tensions between a professionalizing ethos and lay understandings of bereavement. Broader social factors, including the restricted social diversity among volunteers, the perce...
Volunteers traditionally play an essential role in palliative care. Without them, many community and...
This paper reports results from a national survey in 1999 of voluntary hospice services in the UK. I...
This paper addresses the stories of volunteers in hospice and palliative care (HPC) from eight Europ...
The purpose of this study was to assess the role of hospice bereavement volunteers in New Zealand. P...
Volunteering is now a regular feature of health and social care service provision with volunteers wo...
This paper provides an analysis of organisational issues in palliative care. Palliative care service...
Volunteering has a long and established place in the health and social care field, with volunteers n...
Current demographic, policy and management changes are a challenge to hospices to develop their volu...
Volunteers are increasingly considered as core members of interdisciplinary palliative care teams, ...
Introduction The importance of the contribution by volunteers to hospice services is now widely ack...
Historically, in Australia, individuals with widely differing interests, skills and values have enga...
Volunteers have a long history of supporting the development and delivery of hospice and palliative ...
Evidence suggests that in the past support services for patients and family carers of terminally ill...
In the UK, there are between 70,000 and 100,000 hospice volunteers, of whom half have direct patient...
BACKGROUND: Volunteers make a major contribution to palliative patient care, and qualitative studies...
Volunteers traditionally play an essential role in palliative care. Without them, many community and...
This paper reports results from a national survey in 1999 of voluntary hospice services in the UK. I...
This paper addresses the stories of volunteers in hospice and palliative care (HPC) from eight Europ...
The purpose of this study was to assess the role of hospice bereavement volunteers in New Zealand. P...
Volunteering is now a regular feature of health and social care service provision with volunteers wo...
This paper provides an analysis of organisational issues in palliative care. Palliative care service...
Volunteering has a long and established place in the health and social care field, with volunteers n...
Current demographic, policy and management changes are a challenge to hospices to develop their volu...
Volunteers are increasingly considered as core members of interdisciplinary palliative care teams, ...
Introduction The importance of the contribution by volunteers to hospice services is now widely ack...
Historically, in Australia, individuals with widely differing interests, skills and values have enga...
Volunteers have a long history of supporting the development and delivery of hospice and palliative ...
Evidence suggests that in the past support services for patients and family carers of terminally ill...
In the UK, there are between 70,000 and 100,000 hospice volunteers, of whom half have direct patient...
BACKGROUND: Volunteers make a major contribution to palliative patient care, and qualitative studies...
Volunteers traditionally play an essential role in palliative care. Without them, many community and...
This paper reports results from a national survey in 1999 of voluntary hospice services in the UK. I...
This paper addresses the stories of volunteers in hospice and palliative care (HPC) from eight Europ...