Health Education England has awarded 28 health and care organisations £25,000 in funding to help volunteers who want to work in the NHS to progress into a health and care career.
Volunteer to Career is a programme set up by the charity Helpforce which sees clinicians, healthcare leaders, workforce directorates and volunteering services within a trust, come together to design a clear pathway that enables volunteers to develop skills and capabilities related to a particular NHS career role.
For the volunteer the programme provides a period of development, access to support, training and clinical mentoring and a way to measure impact.
It is the aim of the programme to raise the profile of volunteering, ease volunteers into careers, helping to combat workforce shortages and meet local workforce recruitment needs.
Mark Radford, Chief Nurse and Deputy CEO of Health Education England, said: “Volunteers make a great contribution to health and care services, and for those who are interested in a career in health and care it is a practical way of getting a taste of what it is like to work in the NHS.
“We need to make sure that those who want to come and work in the NHS have the opportunity to do so. I’m delighted we are making this money available to help those who use their time to volunteer into the health and care career they want. It is good for the individual volunteer, good for services and good for patients.”
Organisations receive close support from Helpforce in delivering the programme and capturing the impact on the organisations’ workforce, patient care, and the health and wellbeing of staff.
Maeve Hully, Director of Volunteering at Helpforce said: “We would like to send our congratulations to the 28 organisations that have been awarded the funding to run our Volunteer to Career programme.
“We have been running this programme for over a year now with a number of NHS organisations. We have seen strong evidence that shows this programme can help health and care organisations address their workforce challenges. For instance, on completion of the programme 88 per cent of volunteers secured employment or further education and training in health and care.
“We look forward to working with the newly funded organisations to deliver this programme and we are excited to see the great difference that this programme will make to patients, staff and volunteers. We would also like to thank Health Education England for providing us great support so that we are able to help the 10 organisations to embark on this exciting journey.”
Helpforce has spoken to some of those who are on the Volunteer to Career initiative, some of what the found is below:
- At the start of the programme, 49% of volunteers stated they had a rough idea of what they wanted to achieve within their working lives over the next 5 years, which increased to 82% after being in the role.
- The majority of participants showed a high level of interest in a career in the NHS or social care at the start of the programme, with 30 out of 35 indicating they were "very interested"