Volunteerism: 'Community Mothers' in Action

Volunteers represent a growing, but often undervalued, sectio of service delivery in many areas in the community, particularly in health care. This paper is centred on volunteers' perceptions and experiences of home visiting gained through the implementation of the Community Mothers (CM) progra...

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Main Authors: Downie, Jill, Clark, K., Clementson, K.
Format: Journal Article
Published: eContent Management Pty Ltd 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15847
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author Downie, Jill
Clark, K.
Clementson, K.
author_facet Downie, Jill
Clark, K.
Clementson, K.
author_sort Downie, Jill
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Volunteers represent a growing, but often undervalued, sectio of service delivery in many areas in the community, particularly in health care. This paper is centred on volunteers' perceptions and experiences of home visiting gained through the implementation of the Community Mothers (CM) program in Western Australia (WA). Further, the paper aims to inform debate about the issue of professional versus non-professional home visitors and offers a perspective on the issue that may provide direction for policy makers and practitioners. This qualitative study involved individual telephone interviews with a volunteer sample of 12 participants, purposefully selected. Transcript data from each interview was examined and coded utilising an adapted method of content analysis described by Burnard (1991). Three main themes emerged in the findings as to why volunteers became involved in the Community Mothers Program: (1) Empathic concern; (2) Contribution to community life; and (3) Lifecourse issues and personal development. With experiences of volunteers in home visiting, four main themes reflected the participants views: (1) Facilitating client empowerment; (2) Facilitating personal empowerment; (3) Promoting social connectedness, and (4) Enabling goal setting. Although programs such as the Community Mothers Program aim to benefit and support mothers in the parenting role it is clear that there are benefits that emerge also for individual volunteer, such as increased self-esteem, self-efficacy and satisfaction. Hence, measuring the overall outcomes that result from such a program remains a major challenge.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-158472017-01-30T11:52:20Z Volunteerism: 'Community Mothers' in Action Downie, Jill Clark, K. Clementson, K. community health home visiting volunteers Volunteers represent a growing, but often undervalued, sectio of service delivery in many areas in the community, particularly in health care. This paper is centred on volunteers' perceptions and experiences of home visiting gained through the implementation of the Community Mothers (CM) program in Western Australia (WA). Further, the paper aims to inform debate about the issue of professional versus non-professional home visitors and offers a perspective on the issue that may provide direction for policy makers and practitioners. This qualitative study involved individual telephone interviews with a volunteer sample of 12 participants, purposefully selected. Transcript data from each interview was examined and coded utilising an adapted method of content analysis described by Burnard (1991). Three main themes emerged in the findings as to why volunteers became involved in the Community Mothers Program: (1) Empathic concern; (2) Contribution to community life; and (3) Lifecourse issues and personal development. With experiences of volunteers in home visiting, four main themes reflected the participants views: (1) Facilitating client empowerment; (2) Facilitating personal empowerment; (3) Promoting social connectedness, and (4) Enabling goal setting. Although programs such as the Community Mothers Program aim to benefit and support mothers in the parenting role it is clear that there are benefits that emerge also for individual volunteer, such as increased self-esteem, self-efficacy and satisfaction. Hence, measuring the overall outcomes that result from such a program remains a major challenge. 2005 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15847 eContent Management Pty Ltd fulltext
spellingShingle community health
home visiting
volunteers
Downie, Jill
Clark, K.
Clementson, K.
Volunteerism: 'Community Mothers' in Action
title Volunteerism: 'Community Mothers' in Action
title_full Volunteerism: 'Community Mothers' in Action
title_fullStr Volunteerism: 'Community Mothers' in Action
title_full_unstemmed Volunteerism: 'Community Mothers' in Action
title_short Volunteerism: 'Community Mothers' in Action
title_sort volunteerism: 'community mothers' in action
topic community health
home visiting
volunteers
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15847