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Dilemmas in the use of volunteers to provide hospice bereavement support: Evidence from New Zealand.

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Dilemmas in the use of volunteers to provide hospice bereavement support: Evidence from New Zealand. / Payne, S. A.
In: Mortality, Vol. 7, No. 2, 24.06.2002, p. 139-154.

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@article{e9e842b0828c46e1b3286c5fabe0a093,
title = "Dilemmas in the use of volunteers to provide hospice bereavement support: Evidence from New Zealand.",
abstract = "This paper seeks to explore the tension between professionalization and volunteerism in health care. It focuses on the role of volunteers who provide bereavement support services within hospices and palliative care services. The paper draws on evidence from a study of hospice bereavement volunteers conducted in New Zealand. Interviews with 34 co-ordinators, and questionnaires completed by 121 volunteers, from 26 hospices, provided data about the role played by bereavement support volunteers. Differences in the perspectives of co-ordinators and volunteers highlight the tensions between a professionalizing ethos and lay understandings of bereavement. Broader social factors, including the restricted social diversity among volunteers, the perceived value of the lived experience of loss relative to other sources of knowledge, cultural patterns of grief and mourning and asymmetrical power relationships between paid professionals and volunteers, affect how bereavement support services are planned and implemented. This paper proposes that a better conceptual understanding of the role of volunteers in helping others deal with loss and grief is needed.",
author = "Payne, {S. A.}",
note = "This paper resulted from a Winston Churchill Fellowship. RAE_import_type : Journal article RAE_uoa_type : Social Work and Social Policy & Administration",
year = "2002",
month = jun,
day = "24",
doi = "10.1080/1357627022013276",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "139--154",
journal = "Mortality",
issn = "1357-6275",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Dilemmas in the use of volunteers to provide hospice bereavement support: Evidence from New Zealand.

AU - Payne, S. A.

N1 - This paper resulted from a Winston Churchill Fellowship. RAE_import_type : Journal article RAE_uoa_type : Social Work and Social Policy & Administration

PY - 2002/6/24

Y1 - 2002/6/24

N2 - This paper seeks to explore the tension between professionalization and volunteerism in health care. It focuses on the role of volunteers who provide bereavement support services within hospices and palliative care services. The paper draws on evidence from a study of hospice bereavement volunteers conducted in New Zealand. Interviews with 34 co-ordinators, and questionnaires completed by 121 volunteers, from 26 hospices, provided data about the role played by bereavement support volunteers. Differences in the perspectives of co-ordinators and volunteers highlight the tensions between a professionalizing ethos and lay understandings of bereavement. Broader social factors, including the restricted social diversity among volunteers, the perceived value of the lived experience of loss relative to other sources of knowledge, cultural patterns of grief and mourning and asymmetrical power relationships between paid professionals and volunteers, affect how bereavement support services are planned and implemented. This paper proposes that a better conceptual understanding of the role of volunteers in helping others deal with loss and grief is needed.

AB - This paper seeks to explore the tension between professionalization and volunteerism in health care. It focuses on the role of volunteers who provide bereavement support services within hospices and palliative care services. The paper draws on evidence from a study of hospice bereavement volunteers conducted in New Zealand. Interviews with 34 co-ordinators, and questionnaires completed by 121 volunteers, from 26 hospices, provided data about the role played by bereavement support volunteers. Differences in the perspectives of co-ordinators and volunteers highlight the tensions between a professionalizing ethos and lay understandings of bereavement. Broader social factors, including the restricted social diversity among volunteers, the perceived value of the lived experience of loss relative to other sources of knowledge, cultural patterns of grief and mourning and asymmetrical power relationships between paid professionals and volunteers, affect how bereavement support services are planned and implemented. This paper proposes that a better conceptual understanding of the role of volunteers in helping others deal with loss and grief is needed.

U2 - 10.1080/1357627022013276

DO - 10.1080/1357627022013276

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

SP - 139

EP - 154

JO - Mortality

JF - Mortality

SN - 1357-6275

IS - 2

ER -