Publication | Closed Access
Valuing Volunteers: An Economic Evaluation of the Net Benefits of Hospital Volunteers
187
Citations
11
References
2004
Year
Health AdministrationOrganizationsHealth Care FinancePhilanthropyHospital Volunteer AdministratorsHospital VolunteersPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchCivic EngagementHealth SciencesHealth PolicyCommunity EngagementCost EffectivenessCost SharingEconomic EvaluationHealthcare ValueHealth Care DeliveryCommunity ParticipationNursingCommunity DevelopmentHealth EconomicsNet BenefitsHealth Care CostVolunteer Programs
The use of volunteers in hospitals has been an age-old practice. This nonmarket community involvement is a distinctive aspect of North American life. Hospitals may be attracted to increase the use of volunteers, both to provide increased quality of care and to contain costs. Hospitals rely on the use of professional administrators to use the donated time of volunteers efficiently. This study examines the benefits and costs of volunteer programs and derives an estimate of the net value of volunteer programs that accrue to the hospitals and volunteers. In particular, the costs and benefits to hospitals are detailed. Using 31 hospitals in and around Toronto and surveying hospital volunteer administrators, hospital clinical staff members, and volunteers themselves, a striking pay-off for hospitals was found: an average of $6.84 in value from volunteers for every dollar spent—a return on investment of 684%. Civic and community participation is indeed valuable.
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