New volunteer outreach program connects veterans with veterans | va milwaukee health care | veterans affairs
New volunteer outreach program connects veterans with veterans | va milwaukee health care | veterans affairs"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
There’s probably no one better to help a Veteran than a fellow Veteran. To that end, the Milwaukee VA is pioneering a new volunteer outreach program aimed at engaging with Veterans who may
be struggling with their hospitalization. The Veteran Connection Corps, born out of the work of the facility’s Workplace Violence Prevention Steering Group, will put volunteer Veterans in
touch with designated Veteran patients to make a connection and help the patients feel more at ease. “They’ll be very focused on those Veterans who truly need either intervention or
companionship,” said Jessica Serdynski, head of the Center for Development and Civic Engagement, which oversees all volunteers at the Milwaukee VA Medical Center. “The goal is to reduce
some of the behavioral concerns that crop up, and one of the big pieces (to do) this is offering one-on-one interactions.” While all Milwaukee VA volunteers go through orientational-type
training, the VCC members receive specialized training on engaging with Veterans with behavioral issues, possibly due to dementia. The volunteers would not be placed with Veterans with
complicated issues that required professional help, Serdynski said, and they’re not meant to replace therapists or mental health professionals. Instead, it’s for those cases where charge
nurses believe a patient could benefit from that Veteran-to-Veteran interaction. “It could just be somebody who’s lonely and hits the call light a lot, taking up the nurses’ time,” she said.
“That’s a case where a volunteer could alleviate that.” A VCC volunteer might drop in on numerous Veterans during their time, or concentrate on one Veteran, Serdynski said. It depends on
the needs, as determined by the charge nurse on the unit. And those visits could take different forms: The Veterans may play a game together, listen to music, watch a TV program or simply
talk. For patients with dementia, the volunteers will have specially designed activity books, memory games, fidgets, etc., Serdynski said. “They (the volunteers) will meet the Veterans where
they are at,” she said. “If the Veteran is able to engage and tell them what they’d like to do, they’ll do that. Otherwise, it might just be conversation the Veteran needs.” The first VCC
volunteers recently completed their training and are eager to begin their new duties. “I have a heart for Veterans,” said Terri Wooldridge, who has been a volunteer for about three years. “I
am a good listener. I am patient, and I just want to help people. “If I can give them a few minutes of my time to validate them and show that I care, then I think I can make such a
difference. And maybe I can be a voice for them when they have a situation going on.” Wooldridge is a Red Coat Ambassador – a VA program that uses volunteers to greet and assist Veterans at
VA facilities – but that provides only fleeting interaction with Veteran patients, she said. “I want a little deeper connection … a little more time with them to support them with whatever
is going on in their life that day,” she said. Dan Jakubczyk, a longtime volunteer in the hospital, agreed. “I talk to Vets sometimes who say, ‘I’m not from around here; I don’t have any
relatives, and all I see are doctors and nurses.’ So they appreciate having someone come and talk with them. I can listen to them for hours, and hopefully make them feel comfortable.” VCC
member Dan Crass said he often encounters lonely Veterans while serving as a driver for the Disabled American Veterans transportation service. “They just want to talk to somebody,” he said.
“So if I can make one Veteran’s day, if it’s for 15, 20 minutes or an hour, then I’ve met my mission.” The Milwaukee VA has about 420 volunteers, and around 50 percent of them are Veterans
or spouses of Veterans, Serdynski estimated. While some are in the hospital every day for numerous hours a day, others maybe come for one hour week. Volunteers in the hospital don’t
necessarily spend a lot of time with patients. They may drop in to deliver magazines or puzzles, books, or help out with group activities such as bingo, but generally any one-on-one
interactions are fleeting. The VCC changes that. “This is exciting,” Serdynski said. “We’ve put a lot of thought and work into this, gathering all the right resources for the training. “And
it’s unique — it’s Veterans volunteering for Veterans. And the ones who have signed up are committed and ready to go.”
Trending News
Shaun wallace slaps down bradley walsh after 'bad day' swipeAnd despite a few slip-ups, to begin with, the team racked up an impressive 19 steps for Shaun to catch. Shaun’s “bad da...
India captain mithali raj reveals why she was reading rumi before batting - scoopwhoopWomen’s cricket team captain Mithali Raj was seen calmly reading a book before coming on to score a record 7th consecuti...
'I wanted to fight' - Rediff.com movies'People have only seen me crying and being this martyr mother and sacrificing wife.' 'But I want to do so...
Reader feedback: do restaurants in france cater to gluten-free diets?ALLERGENS ARE NOT USUALLY INDICATED ON MENUS The Connexion asked readers to share their experiences of eating gluten-fre...
France Telecom debuts Itineris featuresCANNES, France-France Telecom unveiled new features for its Itineris Global System for Mobile communications system at t...
Latests News
New volunteer outreach program connects veterans with veterans | va milwaukee health care | veterans affairsThere’s probably no one better to help a Veteran than a fellow Veteran. To that end, the Milwaukee VA is pioneering a ne...
Coronation street spoilers: baby bertie injured as daniel osbourne...Coronation Street’s Daniel Osbourne is in self-imposed exile from Weatherfield and, despite his wife’s funeral taking pl...
Chelsea star's comments on enzo maresca speak volumes after european triumphCHELSEA ENDED THE SEASON BY FOLLOWING UP CHAMPIONS LEAGUE QUALIFICATION WITH VICTORY IN THE UEFA CONFERENCE LEAGUE, AS E...
Tracfone scores 215,000 customers during third quarter | rcr wireless newsMEXICO CITY-Prepaid wireless provider TracFone Wireless Inc. reported soaring third-quarter revenues of $330 million, a ...
Jo cox murder: death threats and sexual torment have become part of the job for our mps - enough is enoughSophy Ridge Senior political correspondent, Sky News 17 June 2016 12:19pm BST Jo Cox, the Labour MP for Batley and Spen,...