iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Jeanne Dennis

GET UPDATES FROM Jeanne Dennis
 

Hospice: Volunteering at the End of Life

Posted: 11/25/2011 3:17 am

If I can stop one heart from breaking,

I shall not live in vain;

If I can ease one life the aching,

Or cool one pain,

Or help one fainting robin
Unto his nest again,

I shall not live in vain.


-- Emily Dickinson, "Complete Poems"

Hospice volunteer Linda Harris spent many a recent hour typing up poems and, in the process, learning about life and death, love and family, honesty and what it takes to make a difference. Written over time, some in the final months of life, the poems are the legacy of a remarkable 80-something woman Linda calls "The Poetry Madame."

Linda met the Poetry Madame on Christmas Eve, when she first visited her at home as a hospice volunteer. The following week, New Year's Eve, Linda began what would become a tradition, helping her new acquaintance "get gussied up" and giving her a haircut -- a service she provides regularly to other hospice patients as well. ("I'm the best price in town," she says of her free service.)

Hospice care is an end-of-life-care model that focuses on enhancing quality of life when time is short. It involves an inter-disciplinary team -- including doctors, nurses, social workers, bereavement counselors and nutritionists -- working together addressing the medical, physical, social, emotional and spiritual needs of the patient, as well as providing bereavement support to the family. In keeping with hospice's deeply humane and community-service roots (the word stems from the same root as "hospitality"), the team also includes volunteers like Linda -- more than 460,000 other hospice volunteers across the country.

"Volunteers are an integral and valued part of the team," says Taren Sterry, manager of volunteer services for the Visiting Nurse Service of New York Hospice Care. "They provide that extra level of care and comfort that neighbors used to provide for free, without thinking about it."

In fact, volunteers are mandated by law. Organizations that receive hospice Medicare benefits from the government must have 5 percent of their direct services come from volunteers. Volunteers provide nonprofessional services but are required to undergo intensive training, including interviews and background checks. Our organization asks volunteers to commit to at least one year of service, visiting with one patient one hour per week in the home. Volunteers who visit patients in a residential facility have a small "caseload" per week.

Volunteer services can be as varied as those of any personal relationship and can include:

• Support for patients

• Respite and support for family members

• Vigil services (when death is imminent)

• Bereavement support

Volunteers might sing show tunes with patients, talk about the Yankees, share in watching a favorite soap opera, help compile "final projects" or life reviews and bring in pets for comfort (only at the patient's request, of course). Fundamentally, volunteers provide the most elemental of life's needs, a hand to hold or an ear to listen. "It's really about showing up and being present that day, that minute, that hour -- meeting the patient where they are," says Taren.

"As a volunteer," adds Linda, "it's so important to listen. Someone is welcoming you into their home, and you are just there for them."

Hospice volunteer Abby Spilka describes in her blog what she has spent over a year (more on that in a moment) doing for her extraordinary 101-year-old patient, Hazel: "I have been opening her mail, paying bills, filing, writing letters and thank you notes and serving as her social secretary."

A remarkable part of Hazel's story is that she has been in hospice for longer than most patients, defying all prognoses on life expectancy. Patients enroll in hospice when doctors determine they have six months or less to live, although they can re-certify for hospice care if they outlive the prognosis.

Now, writes Abby, Hazel (a pseudonym to protect privacy) is at the end, "transitioning from living to dying." And Abby, too, is making her own transition. "I am no longer a hospice volunteer sitting with her patient," she writes. "I am a woman watching her friend die."

Rewards and Challenges

I am sometimes asked if it is difficult to be a hospice volunteer, to get to know someone only to have them pass away. The short answer is no. It is rewarding, transformative and life-affirming. The longer answer involves death as part of the continuum of life, understanding expectations, maintaining personal boundaries and undergoing adequate training and education.

"The surprising secret of hospice care is that it's not depleting," says Taren, who herself has been so moved by the hospice experience that she has written a one-woman show about it, called "180 Days." "It's energizing. What you are doing is useful, and someone needs you. These patients would be going through what they're going through whether or not you're there." She adds that hospice volunteers, as with all those involved in hospice, understand that death is a part of life. "We accept the process," she says.

Linda, who was inspired to become a volunteer because of the immense support she felt from hospice when her father and her mother died, calls the work "a gratifying, loving experience. There's no pretense, no façade -- just honesty. The bond you have with a patient usually escalates because of the limitation of time, so you have to seize the moment."

That's just what she did when the Poetry Madame asked Linda to help with a final project, culling, organizing and preserving a lifetime of poems -- including those written in her final three months of life, which provided a powerful salve. "Poetry allowed her to work through so many things," Linda says. "It helped heal her, helped her feel things most of us might otherwise run away from. She shared her poetry with the nurse, the social worker, the chaplain -- it helped all of us."

The Poetry Madame died in June, and Linda plans to present the scrapbook of poems to the family as a legacy of the robust, artistic life of their loved one. "She was, simply put, an exceptional woman," Linda says.

Whether you've had a family connection to hospice care and want to give back, or are interested in learning more about how to support and comfort those in their final days, I encourage you to explore this truly rewarding volunteer opportunity. Visit the Hospice Foundation of America for hospice care volunteer opportunities in your area.

Read more here about volunteer opportunities in New York, with VNSNY Hospice and Palliative Care.

 
If I can stop one heart from breaking, 
I shall not live in vain; 
If I can ease one life the aching,
 Or cool one pain,
 Or help one fainting robin Unto his nest again, 
I shall not liv...
If I can stop one heart from breaking, 
I shall not live in vain; 
If I can ease one life the aching,
 Or cool one pain,
 Or help one fainting robin Unto his nest again, 
I shall not liv...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 9
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
10:19 AM on 11/28/2011
Thanks for linking to Abby Spilka's blog post about volunteering. She also wrote an inspiring piece about why she volunteers. You can read it at http://blogs.vnsny.org/2011/03/28/an-intangible-benefit-of-volunteering/
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Klad InVermont
10:06 AM on 11/27/2011
Thank you for a beautiful article. I've considered volunteering, my brother currently is doing it where he lives. You've inspired me to look into it as well.
photo
VA Jill
I'm not perfect and neither are you
09:25 AM on 11/27/2011
When I was a home health nurse, I loved my hospice patients. It was hard work with them, but you learn much about living from those who are dying.
11:30 AM on 11/26/2011
When my dad was in the last days of his life, my mom and I were talking to his hospice nurse, and we asked the question they all dread - "How will we know when he's at the end?" And she said, "You won't know for sure, but here's something I've found to be true. Those who loved to be the life of the party and loved to be surrounded by people will die when they're surrounded by people. Those who loved to be alone will wait until they're alone in the middle of the night, and that's when they'll die." Sure enough, one night a nurse came and checked on him at 2 AM and he was fine; when she came back at 5 AM he was gone. That was the way my dad would have chosen it if he'd had the choice, and maybe somehow he did.

Hospice helpers give something that doctors and health care professionals rarely express - a glimpse into the foundational truths of life and death. God bless them.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Woodsie
nulli dei, nulli domini
03:16 PM on 11/25/2011
Excellent article, and so true. Thank you.
02:07 PM on 11/25/2011
Absolutely wonderful and true.

Thank~you Ms Dennis.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Damiano Iocovozzi MSN NP
Director, CEO, the Thomas Edwin Walls Foundation
10:45 AM on 11/25/2011
Thank you for the sensitive & thoughtful article. Hospice is still under-utilized in the United States, with the majority of people using it for less than a week before passing away. The signs that death will be visiting are obvious to astute clinicians many months in advance like consistent weight loss, decreasing levels of albumin & pre-albumin, experence with classic disease, changes in body habitus, some subtle & some not so subtle. Many clinicians & their patients pursue medically futile paths & medical obstinacy for many reasons without honest medical goals to accomplish like restoration of health. For people in their last 6 months, the only honest medical goals are relief of symptoms, education & advice about diagnosis & prognosis and doing no harm. Look at end of life for many in the nation's ICUs where the pursuit of medical futility & obstinacy in the dying is business as usual. Hospice is a gift of comfort, care & connection for the dying & their significant others & for those lucky volunteers, a life-affirming experience. Please visit our web page at http://www.soonerorlaterbook.com
Damiano de Sano Iocovozzi at the Thomas Edwin Walls Foundation
07:52 AM on 11/25/2011
I felt like a midwife when I supported my grandmother through her dying process. I want to become a volunteer once my kids grow up and I am in the next chapter of my life.
07:20 AM on 11/25/2011
Hospice volunteers deserve to have a special medal struck in their honor. And they certainly have the gratitude of countless families in America and around the world. However, Americans need to do even more. They need to insist that their state and federal governments pass new laws to authorize doctor-assisted death in terminal cases. Anyone who has seen a loved one suffer in agony for weeks or months before finally dying can testify to the pressing need for such laws. It's really barbaric that in most states doctors are still prevented by law from helping the terminally ill to die with dignity.