Institutions in the medical and nursing sector can include:
- Hospitals
- Nursing homes
- Senior living facilities
- Rehabilitation clinics ...
You should:
- Learn about tasks and functions in nursing fields.
- Familiarize yourself with the structure and organization of your workplace.
- Learn about the duties of employees and eventually perform some of them after training.
- Understand the nursing philosophy of the institution and its corporate philosophy.
- Participate in nursing handovers, ward rounds, supervision, etc.
- Be able to ensure the independence of those in need of assistance.
- Learn tolerance regarding individual life circumstances of those seeking help.
- Be capable of acting responsibly on your own.
Tasks can be quite specific, including:
In caregiving:
- Participation in the planning and execution of group activities (games, crafts, reading, accompanying outings and walks).
- Engaging in leisure activities with the individuals being cared for.
- Accompanying and supporting outings and celebrations.
- Promotion and support of therapeutic measures.
- Escort services and assistance in maintaining or establishing social contacts (accompanying to the doctor, events, shopping, sports, etc.).
In elderly or nursing care:
- Basic care tasks include personal hygiene (partial/full body washing, showering/bathing, intimate hygiene, dental/oral care, combing, shaving).
- Assistance with excretion (urination, defecation, arranging clothing, changing small pads).
- Nutrition (preparing and serving meals and beverages for patients without swallowing disorders).
- Mobility (simple assistance with getting up/going to bed, repositioning, dressing/undressing, walking, standing).
- Housekeeping services (making beds correctly, disinfecting soiled beds, maintaining the patient's home or environment, managing households in an economical and environmentally conscious manner).
- Assistance with housekeeping tasks, such as preparing food with appropriate preparation and follow-up.
What is not allowed:
- Tasks that pose a danger to volunteers and/or those in need of assistance should not be performed.
- Volunteers should not be solely responsible.
- Tasks related to medical care, such as taking body temperature, pulse, blood pressure, medical rubs, medical baths, inhalations, applying cold packs, inserting nasal gastric tubes, administering tube feeding and fluids through a feeding tube, administering medication, injections, hanging intravenous drips, wound care and dressing changes, applying compression bandages, inserting and changing urinary catheters, enemas, enemas, stoma care, bronchial secretion suction.
Please note that this information provides an overview and that specific tasks and responsibilities may vary depending on the institution and the individual's level of training and experience.