Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures, tables and boxes
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Part One Understanding personal, professional and interprofessional ethics within different contexts
- Part Two Personal–professional ethics
- Part Three Professional–interprofessional ethics
- Part Four Personal, professional and interprofessional ethics
- Part Five Professional and interprofessional ethics in multicultural and multinational contexts
- Part Six A way forward?
- Glossary
- Index
seventeen - Palliative care: the professional and interprofessional ethical considerations for the staff–volunteer interface in the UK and India
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 February 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures, tables and boxes
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Part One Understanding personal, professional and interprofessional ethics within different contexts
- Part Two Personal–professional ethics
- Part Three Professional–interprofessional ethics
- Part Four Personal, professional and interprofessional ethics
- Part Five Professional and interprofessional ethics in multicultural and multinational contexts
- Part Six A way forward?
- Glossary
- Index
Summary
Introduction
As part of Part Five, this chapter explores issues of professional and interprofessional ethics across national boundaries (see Figure 1.1). The authors approach ethics and volunteering in palliative care from a number of ethical theoretical perspectives, but principally from a medical and personal ethics standpoint. This chapter uses the case studies of two countries to highlight ethical issues arising from volunteer involvement in two very different settings for palliative care: Kerala in India and the UK.
In a palliative care setting volunteers find themselves as part of a multidisciplinary team. In Chapter One, Hannah and Jindal-Snape discuss the challenges of interprofessional collaboration (IPC) between different professional groups. They also discuss the theories of consequentialism, largely focused on the outcomes of an individual's actions, and deontology, which is more concerned with the ‘rightness’ or ‘wrongness’ of actions (Healy, 2007). When considering the involvement of volunteers as part of the palliative care multi-professional team, the authors were also influenced by these theories. Organisations are most likely to be concerned with implications arising from the outcome of a volunteer's actions while the professional staff team is likely to be most concerned both with the motivations behind these actions and whether they were correct and appropriate.
The World Health Organisation (1998) defines palliative care as:
an approach that improves the quality of life of patients and their families facing the problem associated with lifethreatening illness, through the prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, psychosocial and spiritual. (p 1)
The authors will explore two very different volunteering models: a community model in Kerala, South India and the UK hospice model. There are different issues affecting palliative care in the developing world and hospices in the UK. In countries such as India, the main challenges in the provision of palliative care are the size of population requiring care, scarcity of resources, poverty affecting patients and families and distances to treatment centres. Volunteers and the community play a key role in supporting patients and providing aspects of care. UK hospices, in comparison, are well resourced and staffed; the population, relatively speaking, is better off.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Exploring the dynamics of ethics , pp. 263 - 276Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2014