Promoting Volunteerism in Global Health: Lessons from a Medical Mission in Northern Mexico

The challenges of meeting global health care needs in communities throughout the developing world are becoming increasingly complex. Understanding what motivates volunteers is important for organizations that seek to harness and develop long-term volunteers in order to meet the need for global healt...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of community health 2013-04, Vol.38 (2), p.374-384
Hauptverfasser: Withers, Mellissa, Browner, Carole H., Aghaloo, Tara
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container_title Journal of community health
container_volume 38
creator Withers, Mellissa
Browner, Carole H.
Aghaloo, Tara
description The challenges of meeting global health care needs in communities throughout the developing world are becoming increasingly complex. Understanding what motivates volunteers is important for organizations that seek to harness and develop long-term volunteers in order to meet the need for global health care services. Here we report a case study of a successful volunteer clinic that has provided medical, dental and surgical services to underserved residents of northern Mexico for more than 20 years. Our objective was to understand what promotes sustained volunteerism. Thirty semi-structured interviews were conducted with students, residents, nurses, dentists, oral surgeons and community volunteers, in addition to four full days of participant observation. We analysed volunteers’ experiences with a real-life global medical mission and offer recommendations. Motivating factors included psychological and emotional rewards, career-related benefits, opportunities for interpersonal interaction, the opportunity to serve disadvantaged communities and personal relevance of the mission. We demonstrate the paramount importance of volunteer-patient interaction, having a dedicated facilitator to recruit and pave the way for first-time volunteers and the value of using multiple recruitment strategies. Most important, we show that organizations must focus on facilitating first-time volunteers’ experiences, particularly by ensuring that they are given specific roles and responsibilities, one of the best predictors of volunteer satisfaction and sustained volunteerism.
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Understanding what motivates volunteers is important for organizations that seek to harness and develop long-term volunteers in order to meet the need for global health care services. Here we report a case study of a successful volunteer clinic that has provided medical, dental and surgical services to underserved residents of northern Mexico for more than 20 years. Our objective was to understand what promotes sustained volunteerism. Thirty semi-structured interviews were conducted with students, residents, nurses, dentists, oral surgeons and community volunteers, in addition to four full days of participant observation. We analysed volunteers’ experiences with a real-life global medical mission and offer recommendations. Motivating factors included psychological and emotional rewards, career-related benefits, opportunities for interpersonal interaction, the opportunity to serve disadvantaged communities and personal relevance of the mission. 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We demonstrate the paramount importance of volunteer-patient interaction, having a dedicated facilitator to recruit and pave the way for first-time volunteers and the value of using multiple recruitment strategies. Most important, we show that organizations must focus on facilitating first-time volunteers’ experiences, particularly by ensuring that they are given specific roles and responsibilities, one of the best predictors of volunteer satisfaction and sustained volunteerism.</abstract><cop>Boston</cop><pub>Springer Science + Business Media</pub><pmid>23139029</pmid><doi>10.1007/s10900-012-9627-z</doi><tpages>11</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Adult
Benefits
Careers
Case studies
Clinics
Community and Environmental Psychology
Community Relations
Congenital diseases
Congenital Impairments
Cross Cultural Studies
Dentistry
Dentists
Developing countries
Ethics
Ethnicity
Female
Global Health
Health care
Health Needs
Health policy
Health Promotion and Disease Prevention
Health services
Human Capital
Humans
Interviews
LDCs
Male
Medical Missions, Official
Medical personnel
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Mexico
Middle Aged
Motivation
Nurses
Organizational Case Studies
ORIGINAL PAPER
Participant Observation
Public Health
Qualitative Research
Recruitment
Semi Structured Interviews
Students
Surgeons
Volunteers
title Promoting Volunteerism in Global Health: Lessons from a Medical Mission in Northern Mexico
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