| LIFECARE MEDICAL CENTER |
The Value of
Volunteers

Junior
volunteers pose
proudly with the
LifeCare "Caring
Cart"
filled with
magazines,
activity books,
and other items
that help
brighten
the day of
hospital
patients. The
service is free
to all
inpatients. |
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Anyone who has
volunteered time
and energy to a
worthy cause
understands the
rewards of such
actions are not
measured in
dollars, but in
ways of far
greater value.
At LifeCare
Medical Center,
an outstanding
group of
volunteers is
ready and eager
to provide a
helping hand
anytime it’s
needed.
Call them the
LifeCare
volunteers.
They come in all
sizes, varying
in age from
eight to eighty
years old, and
the good they do
is often
immeasurable.
Looking back,
local volunteers
have help extend
the reach of
medical care
arguably since
the beginning of
rural medicine.
Formally, they
have done so
since 1955.
That’s when the
first
organizational
meeting was held
to select an
executive board
for the Roseau
Health Care
Auxiliary, a
group of women
volunteers
dedicated to
assisting the
Roseau hospital.
At the time, the
auxiliary
consisted of 200
members from 26
groups, each
representing
area townships.
These women
raised funds
through bake
sales and a host
of other
inventive means
all in the name
of local
healthcare.
“The funds
raised helped
pay for things
the hospital was
unable to
purchase on its
own,” says Joyce
Ulvin, Auxiliary
Corresponding
Secretary. “In
the ‘50s, that

A group of
junior
volunteers helps
residents of
LifeCare Roseau
Manor dress
teddy bears that
eventually will
be given to
children who are
admitted to the
hospital. |

included
anything from a
new operating
table to a dryer
for the laundry
department.”
Today, the
auxiliary is
still going
strong, boasting
approximately 80
members and
recruiting more.
And their
message of
volunteering has
taken off in
ways the group’s
founders could
have only hoped.
LifeCare now has
an an entire
department
dedicated to
matching up
community
volunteers with
those most in
need of their
help.
The department
is known as
Volunteer
Services and it
oversees more
than 300
volunteers
throughout
Roseau County.
Pam Sando and
Terry Lamppa are
the Volunteer
Coordinators in
Roseau while
Stacy Hahn
oversees the
volunteers in
Greenbush.
Office clerk
Kristi Ness
keeps everyone
on track by
managing
volunteer files,
statistics, and
other duties.
LifeCare
volunteers
donate anywhere
from one hour a
day to one hour
a year, but as
Lamppa puts it,
“every minute
has value.”
Whether it’s
assisting with a
health fair or
spending a few
quiet moment
with a patient
at the hospital,
the need is
filled thanks to
Volunteer
Services.
“It’s absolutely
amazing to me
that someone
always steps up
whenever we need
a hand,” says
Lamppa, now in
her tenth year
at the hospital.
“Our volunteers
take great pride
in the work they
do, and we take
even |
greater pride in
them.”
Indeed, as the
department
demonstrates by
hosting
appreciation
events for its
volunteers.
During the
winter holidays,
LifeCare
provided a
private
screening at the
Roseau movie
theater.
“The volunteers
enjoyed the
special movie
complete with
popcorn and
refreshments as
a small token of
our appreciation
for their
valuable
contributions,”
Lamppa says.
Other perks for
volunteers
includes free
flu shots,
discounted
memberships at
the LifeCare
Wellness Center,
and more.
Proper
training
Before starting
a task, every
volunteer is
properly trained
and allowed to
job shadow, so
there is a
complete comfort
level from the
very start.
Volunteers also
go through an
orientation
program that
addresses issues
like proper
protocol and
patient
confidentiality.
“All this allows
them to find the
job they like,”
Sando says.
“It’s our duty
to find the
right people for
the right jobs,
and by
interviewing
each new
volunteer and
providing these
steps, we have a
system that
works very
well.”
“There is always
work to be done
in the name of
healthcare,”
Sando says.
“Our department
prides itself in
making LifeCare
even better with
the help of our
dedicated team
of volunteers.” |
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Volunteerism as
a Ministry
Faith
communities are
a great place to
practice
volunteerism.
But where does
someone without
the gift of
teaching, music,
or public
speaking find a
way to
volunteer?
One solution is LifeCare’s Volunteer Visitation Ministry, which
includes
visiting,
listening,
encouraging, and
helping others.
“People with chronic pain or disease often have a hard time
attending
worship
services,”
explains
LifeCare’s
Parish Nurse
Coordinator,
Colleen Klamar,
RN. “By matching
up people who
love to visit
with those who
need to be
visited, we
create a system
that enables
people to stay
connected to
their church
family.”
Once connected, volunteers share an hour or two per week or maybe
an hour or two
per month with
their senior
friend, says
Klamar, who
trains the
groups.
Examples of these welcome services include making friendly visits,
reading, running
small errands,
visiting by
phone, helping
write letters or
emails,
performing
simple chores,
or driving to
appointments or
services.
Volunteer visitors are organized into Care Teams that after
completing the
initial training
session, meet
monthly to
discuss issues
and continue
education.
“Having a Volunteer Visitation Ministry provides opportunities to
show your faith
and service. It
extends pastoral
care to people
in the
congregation who
may be hard to
reach,” she
says.
“The homebound are able to stay in touch with their faith community
during a time
when spiritual
care is just as
important as
physical and
emotional care.”
To learn
more, contact
Colleen Klamar
RN, Parish Nurse
Coordinator at
(218) 463-4751
or cklamar@lifecaremc.com. |
Volunteers &
Hospice |
|
One area where a
special kind of
volunteer is
needed is within
LifeCare’s
Hospice program.
As part of a
team providing
end-of-life care
to the
terminally ill
and their
family, these
volunteers
provide greatly
appreciated
services
including
compassion,
friendship, and
even basic
housekeeping
activities so
that a family
can make the
very most of the
time they have
left together.
“Hospice treats people, not illness. Our focus is on care not a
cure,” says
Shawny Prevost,
RN, LifeCare
Hospice
Coordinator.
That is why clients are referred to the Hospice program when they
reach a stage of
life where no
medical cure
exists.
The hospice team
takes a holistic
approach to care
by addressing
the physical,
emotional, and
spiritual needs
of a client and
their loved
ones, Prevost
explains.
This exceptional kind of care can occur in a client’s home, the
hospital, long
term care, or
assisted living
facility.
“The most rewarding part of being a member of the Hospice Team is
the joy of
visiting with
clients and
their families,”
Prevost says.
Hospice clients receive visits from the trained hospice team
members which
may include
volunteers, a
social worker, a
chaplain, home
care aides, or
nurses.
A registered nurse will assist clients with medication management
in addition to
hospice
equipment and
supplies.
Primary care
physicians are
also part of the
hospice team and
work with other
staff to develop
a plan of care
individualized
to the client’s
needs.
In addition to medical care and respite, visits are made as needed
to provide
support, and
education to
clients and
their families. |

The
dedication of
LifeCare hospice
volunteer Lael
Anderson is
represented by
her work as a
bereavement
correspondent.
In addition to
medical care and
respite, visits
are made as
needed to
provide support,
and education to
clients and
their families. |
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