Making My Day. Volunteering or Working at a Day Centre for Older People: Findings of Exploratory Research in English Day Centres

Q2 Health Professions Journal of long-term care Pub Date : 2021-06-09 DOI:10.31389/JLTC.58
Katharine Orellana, J. Manthorpe, A. Tinker
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Context: Day centres have long traditions in social care in the United Kingdom and internationally. In England, they are provided by a mix of organisations, they are not regulated, and there is no national representative body. Research mainly focuses on centre attenders and carers. Frontline staff and volunteer perspectives are rarely reported. Objective: To highlight the role of day centre work and volunteering for individuals and inform recruitment and workforce development. Methods: Qualitative interview data gathered from seven volunteers and ten staff at four English day centres for older people were thematically analysed. Data are drawn from three-year case study research investigating the role, outcomes, and commissioning of day centres. Findings: Paid or volunteer work in day centres has the potential to make unique contributions to people’s lives. Older volunteers and staff particularly value centres’ group environment and the continuity involved which contribute to person-centred relationships and role satisfaction. These experiences and satisfaction help explain why day centre staff retention is above average in social care. Limitations: Although in diverse settings, this research was small-scale. Only high-quality centres may have participated. Methods may have unintentionally excluded volunteers with learning disabilities. Implications: Within a context of problematic recruitment and retention and policy aspirations for community engagement and building on local assets, findings are relevant to workforce development and local recruitment strategies. Further research might explore what creates the working and volunteering culture within a centre and links between culture and outcomes, with a view to developing a model of day centre culture.
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创造我的一天。在老年人日间中心做志愿者或工作:英语日间中心探索性研究的结果
背景:日间中心在英国和国际社会护理方面有着悠久的传统。在英国,它们是由多种组织提供的,不受监管,也没有全国性的代表机构。研究主要集中在中心护理人员和护理人员。前线员工和志愿者的观点很少被报道。目的:突出日间中心工作和个人志愿服务的作用,并为招聘和劳动力发展提供信息。方法:从4个英语老年人日间中心的7名志愿者和10名工作人员收集的定性访谈数据进行主题分析。数据来自为期三年的案例研究,调查了日托中心的作用、结果和委托。研究发现:日托中心的有偿或志愿工作有可能对人们的生活做出独特的贡献。年长的志愿者和工作人员特别重视中心的团体环境和连续性,这有助于建立以人为本的关系和角色满意度。这些经历和满意度有助于解释为什么日托中心的员工保留率高于社会护理的平均水平。局限性:虽然在不同的环境中,这项研究是小规模的。只有高质量的中心才能参加。方法可能无意中排除了有学习障碍的志愿者。启示:在招聘和保留问题以及社区参与和建立当地资产的政策愿望的背景下,研究结果与劳动力发展和当地招聘战略相关。进一步的研究可能会探索是什么创造了中心内的工作和志愿文化,以及文化与成果之间的联系,以期开发一种日间中心文化模式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
33 weeks
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