McGlinchey Tamsin, Mason Stephen, Skorpen Iversen Grethe, Haugen Dagny Faksvåg, Ruiz Torreras Inmaculada, Barnestein Fonseca Pilar, Bakan Miša, Yildiz Berivan, Smeding Ruthmarijke, Goossensen Anne, Heide Agnes van der, Ellershaw John
Palliative Care Unit, University of Liverpool, UK.
Regional Centre of Excellence for Palliative Care, Haukeland University Hospital, Norway.
Palliat Med. 2025 Jul;39(7):792-802. doi: 10.1177/02692163251328197. Epub 2025 May 29.
Volunteer services that provide direct support to patients receiving palliative and end-of-life care in hospitals are new and developing, but little is known about the use and experience of such services from key stakeholders.
Explore the perceptions of volunteers, and healthcare professionals, towards newly established hospital end-of-life-care volunteer services, in five countries.
A phenomenological approach was adopted, using focus group interviews. Data were analysed using an adapted framework analysis.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Acute hospital in-patient units, in five European countries. Participants were recruited if they were: Volunteers from the end-of-life-care volunteer service, or Healthcare professionals working within the wards that the volunteer service is operational.
20 Volunteers and 20 healthcare professionals were recruited. Most participants were female (70%, = 14/65%, = 13). The healthcare professionals included a majority nurses (60%). Three overall themes were generated: (1) Volunteers provided 'unique, distinct, 'community' support' bringing familiarity to an unfamiliar, medically focussed environment. (2) Volunteers were able to 'establish a connection centred on 'being there' within the acute hospital environment' despite the fast paced and highly changeable environment. (3) Through 'relational interactions adapted to the individual person' volunteers attended to patients' existential and emotional needs.
These services confer benefits that are transferrable across cultures and countries, 'fusing' formal care with the informal visiting of family or friends, attending to patients' existential needs. Recommendations include exploring ways to embed the end-of-life care volunteer service into this unique environment, alongside continuing research to explore cultural differences across different countries.
为在医院接受姑息治疗和临终关怀的患者提供直接支持的志愿服务是新兴且不断发展的,但对于关键利益相关者对这类服务的使用情况和体验知之甚少。
在五个国家探索志愿者和医疗保健专业人员对新设立的医院临终关怀志愿服务的看法。
采用现象学方法,进行焦点小组访谈。使用经过调整的框架分析对数据进行分析。
地点/参与者:五个欧洲国家的急性医院住院病房。如果参与者符合以下条件则被招募:临终关怀志愿服务的志愿者,或在志愿服务开展病房工作的医疗保健专业人员。
招募了20名志愿者和20名医疗保健专业人员。大多数参与者为女性(70%,即14/65%,即13)。医疗保健专业人员中护士占多数(60%)。产生了三个总体主题:(1)志愿者提供“独特、有别于他人的‘社区’支持”,为一个不熟悉且以医疗为重点的环境带来熟悉感。(2)尽管环境节奏快且变化多端,但志愿者能够“在急性医院环境中建立以‘陪伴’为中心的联系”。(3)通过“适应个体的关系互动”,志愿者关注患者的生存和情感需求。
这些服务带来的益处可在不同文化和国家间相互借鉴,将正式护理与家人或朋友的非正式探访“融合”在一起,关注患者的生存需求。建议包括探索将临终关怀志愿服务融入这一独特环境的方法,同时持续开展研究以探讨不同国家间的文化差异。