Volunteers' Experiences Delivering a Community-University Chronic Disease Health Awareness Program for South Asian Older Adults

Journal of Community Health
Polly Ford-Jones, Tamara Daly

Abstract

Volunteers and voluntary organizations can connect preventative health care programs to communities and may play an important role in addressing the health needs of older adults. Despite this, tensions may exist in the structures that drive volunteers and voluntary organizations representing immigrant communities to provide unpaid labour to augment and supplement health care services. Furthermore, organizational challenges may exist for community agencies relying on volunteers to sustain a health screening and education program. The intervention program was led by one voluntary agency specifically for South Asian communities in partnership with the university and five local organizations. This paper draws on volunteer surveys (n = 22) and key informant interviews (n = 12) to detail volunteer experiences providing this intervention. Volunteers were university students and other community volunteers. A total of 810 adults participated in the intervention within the Greater Toronto Area, Ontario, Canada between October 2014 and June 2016. We found that volunteers often used their experience as a 'stepping stone' position to other education or work. They also gained from the knowledge and used it to educate themselves and their fam...Continue Reading

References

Mar 28, 2003·American Journal of Public Health·Kimberly S H YarnallJ Lloyd Michener
May 15, 2007·Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health·Margaret Whitehead
Jan 23, 2013·Value in Health : the Journal of the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research·Ron GoereeBrandon Zagorski
Jul 9, 2013·Perspectives in Public Health·Judy WhiteJane South
Nov 25, 2014·Scandinavian Journal of Public Health·Jane South

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