Anthropology & Ecology of Disease Emergence Unit/Global Health, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France.
Emerging Diseases Epidemiology Unit/Global Health, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France.
BMJ Open. 2021 Jan 26;11(1):e042579. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-042579.
Voluntary organisations provide essential support to vulnerable populations and front-line health responders to the COVID-19 pandemic. The French Red Cross (FRC) is prominent among organisations offering health and support services in the current crisis. Comprised primarily of lay volunteers and some trained health workers, FRC volunteers in the Paris (France) region have faced challenges in adapting to pandemic conditions, working with sick and vulnerable populations, managing limited resources and coping with high demand for their services. Existing studies of volunteers focus on individual, social and organisational determinants of motivation, but attend less to contextual ones. Public health incertitude about the COVID-19 pandemic is an important feature of this pandemic. Whether and how uncertainty interacts with volunteer understandings and experiences of their work and organisational relations to contribute to Red Cross worker motivation is the focus of this investigation.
This mixed-methods study will investigate volunteer motivation using ethnographic methods and social network listening. Semi-structured interviews and observations will illuminate FRC volunteer work relations, experiences and concerns during the pandemic. A questionnaire targeting a sample of Paris region volunteers will allow quantification of motivation. These findings will iteratively shape and be influenced by a social media (Twitter) analysis of biomedical and public health uncertainties and debates around COVID-19. These tweets provide insight into a French lay public's interpretations of these debates. We evaluate whether and how socio-political conditions and discourses concerning COVID-19 interact with volunteer experiences, working conditions and organisational relations to influence volunteer motivation. Data collection began on 15 June 2020 and will continue until 15 April 2021.
The protocol has received ethical approval from the Institut Pasteur Institutional Review Board (no 2020-03). We will disseminate findings through peer-reviewed articles, conference presentations and recommendations to the FRC.
志愿组织为弱势群体和应对 COVID-19 大流行的一线卫生急救人员提供重要支持。法国红十字会(FRC)是在当前危机中提供卫生和支持服务的组织之一。FRC 驻巴黎(法国)地区的志愿者主要由普通志愿者和一些受过培训的卫生工作者组成,他们在适应大流行条件、与患病和脆弱人群合作、管理有限资源以及应对对其服务的高需求方面面临挑战。现有志愿者研究主要关注动机的个体、社会和组织决定因素,但较少关注背景决定因素。公共卫生对 COVID-19 大流行的不确定性是这一大流行的一个重要特征。不确定性是否以及如何与志愿者对其工作和组织关系的理解和经验相互作用,从而促进红十字会工作人员的积极性,是本研究的重点。
本混合方法研究将使用民族志方法和社会网络监听调查志愿者的动机。半结构化访谈和观察将阐明 FRC 志愿者在大流行期间的工作关系、经验和关注点。一项针对巴黎地区志愿者样本的问卷调查将允许对动机进行量化。这些发现将通过对生物医学和公共卫生不确定性以及围绕 COVID-19 的辩论的社交媒体(Twitter)分析进行迭代,这些推文提供了对法国普通公众对这些辩论的解释的深入了解。我们评估社会政治条件和关于 COVID-19 的论述是否以及如何与志愿者的经验、工作条件和组织关系相互作用,从而影响志愿者的积极性。数据收集于 2020 年 6 月 15 日开始,将持续到 2021 年 4 月 15 日。
该方案已获得巴斯德研究所机构审查委员会的伦理批准(编号 2020-03)。我们将通过同行评议文章、会议演讲和向 FRC 提出建议来传播研究结果。