Corbin J Hope, Mittelmark Maurice B, Lie Gro T
Department of Human Services and Rehabilitation, Woodring College of Education, Western Washington University, USA
Department of Health Promotion and Development, Faculty of Psychology, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
Glob Health Promot. 2016 Sep;23(3):72-81. doi: 10.1177/1757975915569514. Epub 2015 Mar 23.
Many nongovernmental organizations in Africa rely on grassroots volunteers to provide critical health services. Considering context and the interplay of individual, organizational, and societal influences on the experience of volunteers, this paper addresses three questions: What do grassroots volunteers contribute? What organizational processes promote volunteer engagement? What are the positive and negative consequences of volunteering? Eighteen members and staff of the Tanzanian HIV and AIDS NGO, KIWAKKUKI, were selected from 6000+ women volunteers to be interviewed. The interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed for themes. Within KIWAKKUKI, volunteers contributed time and local knowledge, leading to an indigenous educational approach building on local norms and customs. Volunteers' engagement was motivated by the desire to support family members, reverse stigma, and work/socialize with other women. Benefits to volunteers included skills acquisition and community recognition; yet some volunteers also reported negative experiences including burnout, conferred stigma, and domestic violence. Positive organizational processes built on cultural practices such as collective decision-making and singing. The findings point to important considerations about context, including the synergistic effect training can have on local traditions of caring, complications of gender inequity, and how community health planning processes may need to be modified in extremely poor settings. This research also suggests good utility of the research framework (the Bergen Model of Collaborative Functioning) that was used to analyze volunteer engagement for service delivery in sub-Saharan contexts.
非洲的许多非政府组织依靠基层志愿者提供关键的卫生服务。考虑到背景以及个人、组织和社会影响对志愿者经历的相互作用,本文探讨了三个问题:基层志愿者做出了哪些贡献?哪些组织流程促进了志愿者的参与?志愿服务的积极和消极后果是什么?从6000多名女性志愿者中挑选了坦桑尼亚艾滋病毒和艾滋病非政府组织KIWAKKUKI的18名成员和工作人员进行访谈。对访谈进行了录音、转录并分析主题。在KIWAKKUKI内部,志愿者贡献了时间和当地知识,从而形成了一种基于当地规范和习俗的本土教育方法。志愿者参与的动机是支持家庭成员、消除耻辱感以及与其他女性一起工作/社交。志愿者的好处包括获得技能和社区认可;然而,一些志愿者也报告了负面经历,包括倦怠、耻辱感以及家庭暴力。积极的组织流程建立在集体决策和唱歌等文化实践之上。研究结果指出了关于背景的重要考虑因素,包括培训对当地关爱传统可能产生的协同效应、性别不平等的复杂性,以及在极端贫困环境中社区卫生规划流程可能需要如何修改。这项研究还表明,用于分析撒哈拉以南地区服务提供中志愿者参与情况的研究框架(卑尔根协作功能模型)具有良好的实用性。