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Palliative Medicine
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Being a hospice volunteer

Birgit Andersson

Institute of Nursing, Sahlgrenska Academy at Gothenburg University, Gothenburg

Joakim Öhlén

Institute of Nursing, Sahlgrenska Academy at Gothenburg University, Gothenburg and Department of Nursing, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, joakim.ohlen{at}omv.ki.se

The aim of this study was to obtain an understanding of what it means to be a hospice volunteer in a country without a tradition of hospice or palliative volunteer care services.

Ten volunteers from three different hospices in Sweden were interviewed. Their narratives were interpreted with a phenomenological hermeneutic method. Three themes were disclosed: motives for becoming involved in hospices, encountering the hospice and encountering the patient. The interpretations disclose a need for the volunteer to be affirmed as a caring person and received in fellowship at the hospice. Positive encounters with a hospice are closely related to personal growth. Volunteers feel rejected if their need for meaning and for belonging to the hospice is not satisfied. This shows that hospices need to set goals in terms of volunteer support, particularly regarding existential issues following the encounter with the hospice and the patient.

Key Words: hermeneutics • hospice volunteer • palliative care • phenomenology • volunteering

Palliative Medicine, Vol. 19, No. 8, 602-609 (2005)
DOI: 10.1191/0269216305pm1083oa


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AM J HOSP PALLIAT CAREHome page
M. Guirguis-Younger and S. Grafanaki
Narrative Accounts of Volunteers in Palliative Care Settings
American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine, March 1, 2008; 25(1): 16 - 23.
[Abstract] [PDF]