Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, Mount Allison University, Sackville, New Brunswick, Canada
Abstract
In all, 162 British hospice volunteers completed the Inventory of Motivations for Hospice Palliative Care Volunteerism (IMHPCV) of Claxton-Oldfield, Wasylkiw, Mark, and Claxton-Oldfield.1 The IMHPCV taps into 5 different categories of motives for becoming a hospice palliative care volunteer: altruism, civic responsibility, leisure, self-promotion, and personal gain. Altruistic motives were the most influential reasons for choosing to join hospice; personal gain motives were the least influential reasons for becoming a hospice volunteer. Altruistic motives were found to be a significant predictor of volunteers’ length of service to the hospice. Compared to previously collected data from a sample of Canadian hospice palliative care volunteers,1 the current study’s sample of British hospice volunteers scored significantly different on 2 of the 5 categories of motives on the IMHPCV.
Cited by
20 articles.
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