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A Meta-Ethnographic Review of Paid Staff and Volunteers Working together in Palliative Care

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A Meta-Ethnographic Review of Paid Staff and Volunteers Working together in Palliative Care. / Oliver, Katherine; Brown, Michelle; Walshe, Catherine et al.
In: Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, Vol. 66, No. 6, e.11, 01.12.2023, p. 656-670.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineReview articlepeer-review

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Oliver K, Brown M, Walshe C, Salifu Y. A Meta-Ethnographic Review of Paid Staff and Volunteers Working together in Palliative Care. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management. 2023 Dec 1;66(6):656-670. e.11. Epub 2023 Aug 11. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2023.08.004

Author

Oliver, Katherine ; Brown, Michelle ; Walshe, Catherine et al. / A Meta-Ethnographic Review of Paid Staff and Volunteers Working together in Palliative Care. In: Journal of Pain and Symptom Management. 2023 ; Vol. 66, No. 6. pp. 656-670.

Bibtex

@article{ba39c1dddc6941518f41c05c510a6a8a,
title = "A Meta-Ethnographic Review of Paid Staff and Volunteers Working together in Palliative Care",
abstract = "Context: Volunteers in palliative care settings are an essential part of care provision for patients and those important to them. Effective collaboration between volunteers and paid staff has been regarded as an important element of successful working, however, at times failures in coordination, information sharing and tensions within teams have been highlighted. Objectives: To explore the views expressed by volunteers and paid staff about their experiences of working together in palliative care settings. Methods: A systematic exploration of qualitative research using a meta-ethnographic approach. PsycINFO, CINAHL, Medline Complete, and AMED databases were searched from inception to December 2021 for the concepts “volunteers” and “palliative care.” Repeated in-depth reading and appraisal of papers identified metaphors and concepts, providing new interpretations. Results: Included papers (n = 14) enabled the construction of five storylines: 1) “we are the cake, and they are the cream”: understanding the volunteer role—separate, but part of a whole. 2) “…we don't know what's wrong with people but sometimes we need to know”: access to information and importance of trust. 3) “everybody looks out for each other”: access to paid staff and their support. 4) “…we don't meddle in the medical”: boundaries. 5) {"}it's the small things that the staff does for me that makes me feel good about my work{"}: sense of value and significance. Conclusions: For effective working relationships between paid staff and volunteers, proactive engagement, recognition of each other's role and contribution, mutual sharing of information, and intentional interaction between both groups is needed.",
keywords = "Palliative care, collaboration, health personnel, meta-ethnography, volunteers",
author = "Katherine Oliver and Michelle Brown and Catherine Walshe and Yakubu Salifu",
year = "2023",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2023.08.004",
language = "English",
volume = "66",
pages = "656--670",
journal = "Journal of Pain and Symptom Management",
issn = "0885-3924",
publisher = "Elsevier Inc.",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A Meta-Ethnographic Review of Paid Staff and Volunteers Working together in Palliative Care

AU - Oliver, Katherine

AU - Brown, Michelle

AU - Walshe, Catherine

AU - Salifu, Yakubu

PY - 2023/12/1

Y1 - 2023/12/1

N2 - Context: Volunteers in palliative care settings are an essential part of care provision for patients and those important to them. Effective collaboration between volunteers and paid staff has been regarded as an important element of successful working, however, at times failures in coordination, information sharing and tensions within teams have been highlighted. Objectives: To explore the views expressed by volunteers and paid staff about their experiences of working together in palliative care settings. Methods: A systematic exploration of qualitative research using a meta-ethnographic approach. PsycINFO, CINAHL, Medline Complete, and AMED databases were searched from inception to December 2021 for the concepts “volunteers” and “palliative care.” Repeated in-depth reading and appraisal of papers identified metaphors and concepts, providing new interpretations. Results: Included papers (n = 14) enabled the construction of five storylines: 1) “we are the cake, and they are the cream”: understanding the volunteer role—separate, but part of a whole. 2) “…we don't know what's wrong with people but sometimes we need to know”: access to information and importance of trust. 3) “everybody looks out for each other”: access to paid staff and their support. 4) “…we don't meddle in the medical”: boundaries. 5) "it's the small things that the staff does for me that makes me feel good about my work": sense of value and significance. Conclusions: For effective working relationships between paid staff and volunteers, proactive engagement, recognition of each other's role and contribution, mutual sharing of information, and intentional interaction between both groups is needed.

AB - Context: Volunteers in palliative care settings are an essential part of care provision for patients and those important to them. Effective collaboration between volunteers and paid staff has been regarded as an important element of successful working, however, at times failures in coordination, information sharing and tensions within teams have been highlighted. Objectives: To explore the views expressed by volunteers and paid staff about their experiences of working together in palliative care settings. Methods: A systematic exploration of qualitative research using a meta-ethnographic approach. PsycINFO, CINAHL, Medline Complete, and AMED databases were searched from inception to December 2021 for the concepts “volunteers” and “palliative care.” Repeated in-depth reading and appraisal of papers identified metaphors and concepts, providing new interpretations. Results: Included papers (n = 14) enabled the construction of five storylines: 1) “we are the cake, and they are the cream”: understanding the volunteer role—separate, but part of a whole. 2) “…we don't know what's wrong with people but sometimes we need to know”: access to information and importance of trust. 3) “everybody looks out for each other”: access to paid staff and their support. 4) “…we don't meddle in the medical”: boundaries. 5) "it's the small things that the staff does for me that makes me feel good about my work": sense of value and significance. Conclusions: For effective working relationships between paid staff and volunteers, proactive engagement, recognition of each other's role and contribution, mutual sharing of information, and intentional interaction between both groups is needed.

KW - Palliative care

KW - collaboration

KW - health personnel

KW - meta-ethnography

KW - volunteers

U2 - 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2023.08.004

DO - 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2023.08.004

M3 - Review article

VL - 66

SP - 656

EP - 670

JO - Journal of Pain and Symptom Management

JF - Journal of Pain and Symptom Management

SN - 0885-3924

IS - 6

M1 - e.11

ER -