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Volunteer Don Deeks goes yellow for the Hospice Care Campaign. Photograph supplied by kind permission of St Ann's Hospice, Manchester


No hospice could function without its network of volunteers and their extraordinary commitment. If you are interested in volunteering you should contact your local hospice and ask to speak with the Voluntary Services Manager. The majority of hospices have a full time Voluntary Services Manager whose job it is to match volunteers to suitable tasks.

Volunteers bring something unique to hospices - a sense of community and felllowship at a difficult time and vulnerable time in people’s lives.

How to volunteer in a children’s hospice

How to volunteer in an adult hospice

 
   
 


Volunteer Albert Rouse, and Jonathan Wrather, previously 'Joe' in Coronation Street.

Photograph supplied by kind permission of
St Ann's Hospice, Manchester

 


Volunteers bring something unique and distinctive to the hospice movement – a sense of community and fellowship, at a difficult and vulnerable time in people’s lives, and a special mix of skills and experiences.

What I do
Read about volunteers in local hospices/hear from local volunteers:


 


"The hospice is a place that is bursting with life and aims to let patients live life to the full in what time they have left. Here, the focus is not
about dying but
about life and all the opportunities within it."

Catriona, 15
(second from right)

 


Catriona
, 15, started volunteering at the Prince and Princess of Wales Hospice, Glasgow, as part of her Duke of Edinburgh's Bronze Award. She volunteers in the fundraising department helping out with designing flyers, getting competition prizes, and getting free advertising for the hospice. The fundraising department was the part of the hospice that best suited her availability. She is at school so goes in once a week for an hour.

She says she was very nervous about going to the hospice for the first time. She wasn't sure that she would like it and thought that she would be too scared. She had seen images on TV of hospices and was really worried about it. However, when she got there she was given a tour around and immediately felt comfortable there. She says that the staff have all been wonderful and that the hospice is bright and welcoming.

She finished her bronze award and is starting her silver but says that even if she had decided not to carry on with Duke of Edinburgh she would have stayed on at the hospice as she is enjoying it so much. She thinks that it has been really good work experience for her too. She also likes securing prizes and donations for the hospice as she feels she is making a real difference to them.

 
 

Sarah, 33, started volunteering at Garden House Hospice, Letchworth after losing her 20 year old nephew in a car crash. She made a new year's resolution to make a difference and to start volunteering. Sarah began volunteering, after an induction course, on the hospice’s reception and is there to look after relatives, carers and patients' visitors. She acts as a shoulder to cry on or just a friendly face to guide them around the hospice.

She feels that because she has lost someone she is able to relate to the experiences and grief of the people she meets at the hospice. She volunteers for a few hours once a month and doesn't find it too difficult to fit it into her life. She is married with two young children.

 

 
 
Sara, a student at Royal Holloway University, found out about Harlington Hospice Association whilst looking into careers in Public Relations. (This hospice is listed on the of Institute of Public Relations website.) Sara undertook a piece of independent research looking at the contact between the hospice and past donors with the aim of establishing whether past donors are satisfied with the level of contact

between themselves and the hospice and also to suggest areas for improvement in the future. Sara volunteers 1 full day a week.

 

Mohamud, a second year student of accounts, has been volunteering for Harlington Hospice Association in the finance department. He wanted to have a practical working experience out of the classroom. He is now also involved in the hospice’s ethnic minority project with the Somali Community.

Mohamud works 2 days a week. He took it upon himself to involve the famous Somali pop singer, Kascay,to perform at our multi cultural show ‘Charity Razzmatazz’, held on the 19th November 2004 at the Greenford Hall in Greenford.

 

 
 

Coffee Shop Volunteer, Marie Allen
Photograph supplied
by kind permission of
St Ann's Hospice, Manchester
Coffee Shop Volunteer, Marie AllenPhotograph supplied by kind permission ofSt Ann's Hospice, Manchester
       
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