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Hospice
volunteer shares her story
Alice Altenburg
(left) of Allegany became a hospice volunteer more than six
years ago. A
retired elementary school teacher, she had volunteered for
various organizations. When
she discovered hospice, she committed herself to a mission so
many people share throughout western New York – to support
terminally ill patients and their families.
“In 1997, my mother
needed care. She
had a terminal illness,” Alice said.
HomeCare &
Hospice provided Alice’s mother with a home health aide to
assist with day-to-day tasks, skilled nursing and spiritual
care. Alice
received bereavement support visits, mailings and telephone
calls for more than a year after her mother died.
“I was very
impressed with the program and the care she received,” Alice
recalls. “She was
on hospice for about four months.
It was my only chance to get out.
Mom and I both looked forward to the staff visits.”
After her mother
died, Alice decided she wanted to give something back.
She talked to her spiritual care coordinator about
working with hospice patients, but the agency asked she wait
about one year to address her grief.
At the earliest
possible moment, Alice called HomeCare & Hospice and applied
to become a patient care volunteer.
She knew nothing about hospice except what she learned
taking care of her mom. HomeCare
& Hospice provided her with training and she began her new
volunteer career.
Today, Alice reads to
patients and writes letters for them.
She helps them to the bathroom and shifts them in bed.
She walks with them and prepares meals.
“I had a patient
with Lou Gehrig’s Disease,” she remembers.
“I would take him the newspaper and pick out articles
to read. I read
books and gave him water.”
After the patient
died, she provided bereavement support.
“I talked to his
wife. It was hard
for her at first, to talk about his death,” she said.
“It was hard for her to accept it.
But it was easier for her talk to me, because we knew
each other.”
In addition to
patient care, HomeCare & Hospice receives support from
office and special event volunteers.
Office volunteers perform clerical duties, which directly
support the HomeCare & Hospice mission.
Guild and special event volunteers staff and support
activities, including the Tree of Life, Spring Bouquet Sale and
Hike for Hospice.
When asked what makes
a good volunteer, Peggy Gillespie, volunteer coordinator,
replied, “A caring heart.”
She added, “It makes you feel better as a person to
reach out, to meet someone else’s needs.”
In Cattaraugus
County, hundreds of residents face terminal illness each year.
Often, a loved one cannot care for that person alone.
The hospice program of HomeCare & Hospice provides
skilled nursing care, such as medication administration, wound
care and catheterization, and home health aide care.
Spiritual care coordinators, social workers and
bereavement coordinators provide additional support to both the
patient and their family. Hospice
also provides durable medical equipment, supplies and medication
related to the terminal illness.
Without HomeCare
& Hospice, patients may not have the choice to die with
dignity in the comfort of their home.
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