International Observatory on End of Life Care, Division of Health Research, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK.
Department of Palliative Medicine, Medical University of Gdańsk, Gdańsk, Poland.
Palliat Med. 2023 Feb;37(2):203-214. doi: 10.1177/02692163221135349. Epub 2022 Nov 25.
Early indications were of a major decline in specialist palliative care volunteer numbers during COVID-19. It is important that ongoing deployment and role of volunteers is understood, given the dependence of many palliative care services on volunteers for quality care provision.
To understand the roles and deployment of volunteers in specialist palliative care services as they have adjusted to the impact of COVID-19.
Observational multi-national study, using a cross-sectional online survey with closed and free-text option questions. Disseminated via social media, palliative care networks and key collaborators from May to July 2021.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Any specialist palliative care setting in any country, including hospices, day hospices, hospital based or community teams. The person responsible for managing the deployment of volunteers was invited to complete the survey.
Valid responses were received from 304 organisations (35 countries, 80.3% Europe). Most cared for adults only (60.9%), provided in-patient care (62.2%) and were non-profit (62.5%). 47.0% had cared for people with COVID-19. 47.7% changed the way they deployed volunteers; the mean number of active volunteers dropped from 203 per organisation to 33, and 70.7% reported a decrease in volunteers in direct patient/family facing roles. There was a shift to younger volunteers. 50.6% said this drop impacted care provision, increasing staff workload and pressure, decreasing patient support, and increasing patient isolation and loneliness.
The sustained reduction in volunteer deployment has impacted the provision of specialist palliative care. Urgent consideration must be given to the future of volunteering including virtual modes of delivery, micro-volunteering, and appealing to a younger demographic.
有早期迹象表明,在 COVID-19 期间,专业姑息治疗志愿者人数大幅下降。鉴于许多姑息治疗服务依赖志愿者提供高质量的护理,了解志愿者在专业姑息治疗服务中的角色和部署情况非常重要。
了解志愿者在专业姑息治疗服务中的角色和部署情况,因为他们已经适应了 COVID-19 的影响。
采用多国观察性研究,使用横断面在线调查,包括封闭和自由文本选项问题。于 2021 年 5 月至 7 月通过社交媒体、姑息治疗网络和主要合作伙伴进行传播。
地点/参与者:任何国家的任何专业姑息治疗环境,包括临终关怀院、日间临终关怀院、医院或社区团队。负责管理志愿者部署的人员被邀请完成调查。
从 304 个组织(35 个国家,62.5%为非营利组织)收到了有效回复。大多数组织仅为成年人提供服务(60.9%),提供住院护理(62.2%)。其中 47.0%的组织曾为 COVID-19 患者提供护理。47.7%的组织改变了志愿者的部署方式;每个组织的活跃志愿者人数从 203 人减少到 33 人,70.7%的组织报告称直接面向患者/家庭的志愿者人数减少。志愿者群体更趋年轻化。50.6%的组织表示,这一减少对护理服务产生了影响,增加了员工的工作量和压力,减少了对患者的支持,增加了患者的孤立和孤独感。
志愿者部署的持续减少对专业姑息治疗服务的提供产生了影响。必须紧急考虑志愿者服务的未来,包括虚拟交付模式、微志愿服务以及吸引更年轻的人群。