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I need to connect - Palliative Care Connect

I need to connect with the community

Patients, carers, families and friends are all parts of communities and neighbourhoods. Your experience with palliative care may influence you to seek company, connection or community engagement.

Palliative care is for people of any age with a life-limiting illness and their families. A life-limiting illness is one likely to cause death in the foreseeable future. This can include illnesses such as cancer, neurological disease, dementia and advanced kidney, heart, liver, and lung disease. Palliative care helps people to live their life comfortably and as fully as possible by supporting their physical, emotional, social, and spiritual needs.

Everybody has a role to play in palliative care. While medical care for the patient is provided by the doctor or palliative care team, all of us can support our friends, neighbours and colleagues who may be ageing, caring, dying or grieving. By acknowledging them we help them remain connected to the community. We can also actively engage with them by offering practical supports.

Helpful resource - CareSearch: What is palliative care?

Information sheet explaining what palliative care is, who it is for and who provides it.

If you are interest in volunteering in palliative care, Palliative Care Volunteering SA is a great way to start. This project supports palliative care volunteers across SA and offers learning options about volunteering in palliative care. It will also work at embedding palliative care in existing volunteer programs. Volunteering in palliative care helps improve the experience of families throughout the state. It is as easy as registering to find out more.

Helpful resource - Palliative Care Volunteering SA: Volunteering Hub

The Palliative Care Volunteering project and Palliative Care SA Volunteer provide support and connections to palliative care volunteers, organisations, and volunteer managers throughout the state.

As a patient or carer, you may find that illness and caring are reducing your engagement with friends, neighbours, and social activities. Your illness may also leave you feeling vulnerable. Your family may not live close by, and the local neighbourhood may have changed. Transport may have become more difficult. As a result, you may feel isolated and lonely.

Social networks can contribute to your sense of wellbeing. Meeting, sharing, and learning with others can help develop a sense of purpose and community. You can explore opportunities to connect with others in the community. Council groups, community centres and libraries can also provide different groups and activities. SA Community hosts a Directory of Community Services that can connect you with services and community organisations.

Local palliative care services often have a volunteer service which can offer social support to you as a patient and /or carer. The Aged Care Volunteer Visitors Scheme connects volunteers and older people to provide friendship and companionship.

Helpful resource - Palliative Care SA: Training and Events

Information on education, events and groups for the SA community.

People often become aware of palliative care through a close encounter with death. You may have had a partner or parent die. You may have cared for someone with a life limiting illness at home until they died or been a regular visitor to an aged care facility. Volunteering with the palliative care service, connecting with Compassionate Communities or offering to help the aged care service can be a way to share what they have learned with others who are now facing end of life. Palliative Care SA encourages people to become a volunteer and support SA families and communities by joining their Volunteer Village.

Some volunteers may not have had a palliative care experience but are simply active in their local community and are looking for ways to contribute. There are many ways people can offer help in their community. Most people will contact the palliative care or aged care service to ask about helping. Others may contact their local council or Volunteering Australia.

Helpful resource - Volunteering Australia: Govolunteer opportunities

Govolunteer is an initiative of Volunteering Australia and provides a searchable database of opportunities to help.

Compassionate communities can be seen as naturally occurring networks of support in neighbourhoods and communities, surrounding those experiencing death, dying, caregiving, loss, and bereavement. They support people at end of life and their families in many ways and the shape of these communities is determined locally by the people involved. There is growing interest in this approach to support and care and provides a mechanism for local people to get involved and make a difference.

Palliative Care SA is running a compassionate communities project. The City of Tea Tree Gully has resources developed from their compassionate communities project. The Onkaparinga Compassionate Communities Collaborative is a project of Healthy Cities Onkaparinga and Southern Vales Compassionate Communities.

Helpful resource - Palliative Care Queensland: What are compassionate communities?

A short video explaining the concept of Compassionate Communities.

Would you like to speak with a Palliative Care Navigator?

Call 1-800-725-548 (PALLI8), Monday to Friday from 08:30 am to 04:00 pm. You can request a call back by filling out our call back form.

Request a call back