Volunteering in NHS Trusts

A new strategic vision

Source: The King’s Fund

The Covid-19 pandemic has highlighted the huge potential and contribution of volunteers and both the NHS Long Term Plan and the most recent workforce plan recognise and commit to maximising the value of volunteers in the NHS. There is now an opportunity for NHS trusts to consider the role of volunteers, develop a strategic approach to volunteering and identify how to move volunteering from an ‘added extra’ to making an integral contribution to the delivery of health care.

Their latest research draws on the current evidence, analysis of NHS trust volunteering and the experiences of trust volunteering services and is presented in two reports:

Covid 19

Current awareness updates

Impact of Covid-19 on new parents: one year on: Government Response to the Committee’s First Report.
Petitions Committee; 2022.
[The government’s response points to the £500 million investment announced in the 2021 Autumn Spending Review for family and early years services. This report concludes that this goes some way to addressing the ‘baby blind spot’ in Covid-19 recovery spending identified in the Committee’s report but the response contains no new commitments in response to the concerns raised and recommendations made in the report.]

Volunteering and helping out in the COVID-19 outbreak.
Centre for Ageing Better; 2022.
[This report, based on research conducted by NatCen Social Research, aims to understand the patterns of formal volunteering and informal support that emerged in, and between, July 2020 and November 2020.]

Community connectedness in the COVID-19 outbreak.
Centre for Ageing Better; 2022.
[This report investigates how people across England related to their neighbourhoods as the COVID-19 pandemic challenged individuals and communities while reducing their access to traditional mechanisms of support.]

Covid 19

Current awareness updates

Contingency framework: education and childcare settings.
Department for Education (DfE); 2021.
[The updated framework describes the principles of managing local outbreaks of Coronavirus (COVID-19) (including responding to variants of concern) in education and childcare settings, covering: the types of measures that settings should be prepared for; who can recommend these measures and where; when measures should be lifted; how decisions are made.]

Use of telecritical care for family visitation to ICU during the COVID-19 pandemic: an interview study and sentiment analysis.[Abstract]
Sasangohar F. BMJ Quality & Safety 2021;30(9):715-721.
[Conclusions: Use of virtual intensive care unit (vICU) for remote family visitations evoked happiness, joy, gratitude and relief and a sense of closure for those who lost loved ones. Identified areas for concern and improvement should be addressed in future implementations of telecritical care for this purpose.]

Impact of COVID-19 on migrants’ access to primary care and implications for vaccine roll-out: a national qualitative study.
British journal of general practice; 2021.
[COVID-19 has led to big changes in UK primary care, including rapid digitalisation, with unknown impact on migrant groups. The aim of this study is to understand the pandemic’s impact on recently-arrived migrants and their access to primary health care, and implications for vaccine roll-out.]

A rapid needs assessment of excluded people in England during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic.
Doctors of the World UK; 2020.
[The aim of this rapid needs assessment was to identify and describe the needs of routinely excluded groups, arising from the COVID-19 pandemic in England, to raise awareness, inform advocacy and form recommendations for action. Groups included refugees, migrants, people affected by modern slavery, homeless, Roma and traveller communities, sex workers and people recently released form prison.]

Volunteering and wellbeing during the Coronavirus pandemic.
Wales Centre for Public Policy; 2021.
[Volunteering has played a crucial role in supporting communities during the pandemic. Interest in volunteering saw a dramatic spike early in the pandemic, and volunteers have helped meet people’s emotional and physical needs during the crisis. To inform this recovery planning, WCPP conducted 2 studies on the contribution of volunteering to individual and community wellbeing during the pandemic: a synthesis of 50 practice-based case studies using a synthesis method and a rapid evidence review.]

Case Studies

The role of volunteering in community-centred public health system – case studies with NCVO

In 2020, PHE’s healthy communities team partnered with the National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO) to develop a number of case studies that reflect the role of volunteering in community-centred public health systems. This is part of PHE’s work on whole system approaches to community-centred public health, as well as NCVO’s workplan as a member of the VCSE Health & Wellbeing Alliance.

Through this work, NCVO have pulled together six case studies, that reflect a range of public health themes and volunteering approaches. They also reflect work from a range of settings, from rural Cumbria to large cities such as Birmingham and Sheffield.

For more information click here.

Wellbeing

The impacts of volunteering on the subjective wellbeing of volunteers: a rapid evidence assessment

Source: Kings Fund Health Management and Policy Alert

There is a growing body of research on the links between volunteering and wellbeing. This review (co-published with Spirit of 2012, and in partnership with the Institute of Volunteer Research) brings together the most relevant studies. It focuses on the experience of adult formal volunteers, and looks at the key factors involved in improving wellbeing through volunteering.

For more information click here.