Wednesday, 25 March 2015 18:52

Celebrating Hospice Volunteers April 12 – 18

During National Volunteer Week, Hospice of Amador & Calaveras Honors those who Give Selflessly to Others

 

 Over 40 years ago, the U.S. hospice movement was founded by dedicated volunteers who wanted to bring compassion and care to people at life’s end. This commitment to volunteering among our nation’s hospices continues to be a foundation of hospice care. 

 

During National Volunteer Week, April 12-18, Hospice of Amador & Calaveras is celebrating the many gifts of its dedicated volunteers from our community who provide support, companionship and dignity to patients and family caregivers facing serious and life-limiting illness. 

 

“Hospice care began as a grassroots volunteer-driven movement and without volunteers, we could not do the work we have been doing at Hospice of Amador & Calaveras since 1982,” said Dan Riordan, Executive Director.  "Volunteers are the heartbeat of our agency, without them it would be difficult to do the work we do," said Ann Metherd, Volunteer Coordinator

 

More than 200 volunteers provide over 21 thousand hours per year to help Hospice of Amador & Calaveras care for patients and families in the community. These hours also include our thrift store/fundraising and bereavement volunteers. 

 

Hospice volunteers often serve patients and families at the bedside but they also assist in the office, help raise awareness, contribute to educational programs, and provide fundraising support and more.

 

The National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization reports that there are an estimated 355,000 trained hospice volunteers providing more than 16 million hours of service to hospice programs each year. 

 

An estimated 1.6 million patients in the U.S. are cared for by hospice every year.

 

Hospice volunteers help the people they serve live every moment of life to the fullest and enable the organizations they work with to achieve their mission in the community. Most hospice volunteers choose to give their time helping others because of their own experience with the compassionate care hospice provided to a dying loved one. 

 

The following is a quote from Ann Andrews 15 year volunteer when she was asked why she volunteers, "I feel like I need and want to give back because I feel I have been given so much."   "The contribution I am giving makes me feel good.  I enjoy working with the staff even though I may not know all of them personally I feel a part of the team.  They help me feel that way."

 

It is federally mandated under Medicare that five percent of all patient care hours be provided by trained volunteers reflecting the vital role that volunteers play in the provision of care.

 

For those interested in learning more about hospice or volunteer opportunities, please contact Ann Metherd, Volunteer Coordinator, or visit hospiceofamador.org or contact us at (209)223-5500.