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Volunteering program at manors catching on with West Prince residents

Phyllis Weatherbie and Dale Ryan entertain patients at the Western Hospital in Alberton. They are part of the first wave of volunteers to sign up since a volunteer program was established incorporating the manors and hospitals in Alberton and O’Leary.
Phyllis Weatherbie and Dale Ryan entertain patients at the Western Hospital in Alberton. They are part of the first wave of volunteers to sign up since a volunteer program was established incorporating the manors and hospitals in Alberton and O’Leary. - Eric McCarthy

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ALBERTON, P.E.I. - Phyllis Weatherbie and Dale Ryan have an afternoon gig every Tuesday – entertaining Western Hospital patients.

Weatherbie says the patients seem to enjoy them.

“We like to sing the old songs they know.”

“As long as they enjoy it, you enjoy it, too,” adds Ryan in describing the satisfaction they get from volunteering.
The duo is helping break new ground in West Prince and P.E.I.

Just over a year ago, Andrew Ramsay took on a role as volunteer co-ordinator for the hospitals and manors in Alberton and O’Leary. Since then he has assembled a list of 220 volunteers who help out at Western Hospital or Maplewood Manor in Alberton or Community Hospital or Margaret Stewart Ellis Home in O’Leary. Some of the volunteers help out in more than one institution.

“With a lot of volunteers, those who do, do a lot. They like to contribute wherever then can,” Ramsay acknowledged.

While volunteer programs were already well-established at the two long-term care facilities, until last February there was no formal program in place at either of the hospitals.

Many of the volunteers on his list, Ramsay said, were already helping out at one of the long-term care facilities and agreed to help pioneer the program in the hospitals.

Ramsay does not want to take away from the manors’ volunteer network. Part of his mandate is to expand the volunteer opportunities in those facilities.

George Profit, a Western Hospital patient, said the volunteer entertainers help break up an otherwise long day.

“It’s a great program. They treat you good,” he said. “It’s good of them to come here.”

The volunteer program is co-funded by Acadian and Francophone Affairs through the Canada-P.E.I. French Language Services grant and Health P.E.I.

Ramsay said he surveyed staff at the two hospitals on where they felt volunteers could be most effective. Staff pointed to a need for activities for patients. The grant has allowed for the purchase of board games, cards, card-holding slots, puzzles and other items volunteers can use to help patients pass time.

Western and Community hospitals are the only ones in the province offering such volunteer-driven activities for patients. Volunteers can also sign up for information desk roles at the hospitals, helping to direct patients and clients to the services they require.

There are some other firsts for the West Prince program – the first volunteer program in the province incorporating hospitals and long-term care facilities and the first with an online volunteer sign-in component.

Interested volunteers can fill out a form at the hospitals or online. They must provide character references, apply to the RCMP for a vulnerable sector check and sign a confidentiality agreement. There is also an orientation process to familiarize volunteers with the facility and its policies and procedures.

An online option is also available, where registered volunteers can sign up for shifts.

“Each volunteer has their own account. They have the ability to sign up for volunteer roles that they’ve been assigned,” Ramsay explained.

The assignments are based on the volunteers’ areas of interest.

The hospitals and manors can still use more volunteers.

The volunteer hours are tracked though a Volgistics software program, which recently garnered a West Prince Chamber of Commerce Community Impact Award.

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