How Doulas Help
Hospices Meet Their Mission
By Beth A. Eck, PhD
In June of 2019, I began my quest to become a hospice death doula volunteer. For
those who may not be familiar, an
end-of-life doula guides individuals transitioning to death and their loved
ones through the dying process. After a heady turn of events, I recently
completed my first year as the Director of End-of-Life Doula Services for
Hospice of the Piedmont in Charlottesville, Virginia. I am a practicing
doula for hospice and palliative patients, but in my unanticipated “encore
career,” I also train and supervise new hospice doulas, communicate with the interdisciplinary
team (IDT), and run consultation groups. My job is a full-time, salaried position;
I’ll share a little about that journey below, but more importantly, offer practical
steps for hospice agencies to incorporate the end-of-life doula role.
After I returned from my first end-of-life (EOL) doula
training in May of 2019, I knocked on the door of my non-profit hospice where I
had been volunteering for the previous six months. I asked the volunteer
department for supervisory hours (required for the training organization’s
certification process) and was told they would need to know more about doulas
and what I was requesting. I wrote up a five-page single-spaced proposal
replete with footnotes—the occupational hazard of an academic. I covered the
support a doula offers; I stated why the work did not require a particular
degree or professional background; I offered how doulas offer complementary
supports and not duplicative ones (i.e., they did not take the place of social
workers or volunteers), and I argued that exploring the proposition was
mutually beneficial—I would find out if I was suited to doula work, and they could
find out if it was the kind of discipline they wanted to invest in. Because the
number of doula training organizations seemed to be proliferating, I knew
doulas were becoming more mainstream, and I argued that our hospice could be a
leader in working with doulas rather than dismissing their potential impact. I knew
I would not be the last to knock on the door.
Bureaucracy is bureaucracy and so the process was not as
straightforward as I assumed, but after many internal discussions, my proposal
made it up the chain of command for approval. Even so, there was an overriding
concern about structure. To have a doula, even a volunteer one, seemed to
require some rethinking of the organizational chart as well as a clear delineation
between existing volunteers and doula volunteers.
If doulas are volunteers, will all patients have equal
access to their services? If we have many doulas, who will supervise them? What
if we train them and they decide not to volunteer for us and are privately hired
by families instead? What if patients don’t want ‘just’ a volunteer anymore and
only want doulas? These are legitimate concerns, and the answer for your
organization may be different than it was for mine. Instituting an in-house
doula program, or incorporating trained doulas into your fold, is not without
its hiccups, but my organization and I would argue that it is well worth the
effort.
If you are not ready to hire a Director of End-of-Life
Doula Services or have an in-house training program, I want to share what I
have learned about how a doula can gain legitimacy within hospice teams and bring
value to the organization. Some of these suggestions assume the doulas have a
flexible schedule. If they do not, it will require some creative substitutes.
1. Embed
your doulas within an interdisciplinary team. During the orientation period,
they can introduce themselves and learn faces, names, and roles without a
patient assignment, and can comment on cases where a doula would be helpful.
2. Arrange
for the doulas to shadow team members. This is something a typical volunteer
does not do. Shadowing a social worker and chaplain is likely enough, and these
disciplines are good choices because doulas will work closely with them while
supporting the patient. The “ride-along”
will provide an opportunity to dispel concerns about overlapping roles and help
to build bridges.
3. Discuss
and decide on patients for the doulas to serve. Generally, patients who make a good
fit are those who are interested in doing life review or legacy work, practical
planning, or storytelling. They are patients who wish to plan their own active
dying period and/or would like more presence at their bedside. They are also patients
whose families welcome this kind of support.
Another barrier hospices may face when first integrating
doulas into their programs is that doulas generally work with only one to two
patients at a time to ensure those patients and their loved ones have the best
experience possible. Doula work is intimate; they can spend hours with patients
at any given visit, prohibiting a large caseload. From an administrative viewpoint,
this may not sound good. Why is it worth having doulas if they cannot see
very many patients?
·
Medicare regulations can make it difficult for
dedicated clinical care team members to spend the amount of time they would
like with patients; doulas can fill in that space, deepening relationships.
·
Because of this relationship, doulas help
hospices achieve the desired continuity of care. We are with patients through each
transition in their death journey.
·
Hospices are evaluated on their ability to
provide a good patient care experience. Doulas are a bridge to comprehensive
team communication as they fill in gaps about patients and their families. Their
ability to spend long periods of time with patients means they can provide an
intensive layer of emotional support.
·
An in-house doula program need not cost much.
Thus far, our program is staffed by volunteers, and we offer the training for
free. All costs associated with the doula program are covered by philanthropic
dollars. There is some cost to market the program, but death doulas may present
a very attractive donor opportunity. If you bring on board doulas trained
outside your organization, they need only be trained as volunteers by your
hospice to participate.
Having doulas work with your hospice is a win-win, though
the road to victory is not necessarily easy. You cannot anticipate every question,
scenario, or challenge, and it will take patience to make it work. Hospices
were the first iteration of the “death positive movement.” Doulas are
the newest. Let’s work together to make sure everyone has their good death.
Beth A. Eck, PhD, is a practicing death doula and the
Director of End-of-Life Doula Services at Hospice of the Piedmont (HOP) in
Charlottesville, Virginia. Beth started at HOP on August 1, 2021, where she was
hired to develop an in-house death doula training program. Beth did her own
training with the International End-of-Life Doula Association and Going with
Grace. She is National End-of-Life Doula Alliance (NEDA) proficient and a
member of the NHPCO’s End-of-Life Doula Council. She earned her PhD in 1996
from the University of Virginia and is an Emeritus Professor of Sociology at
James Madison University where she taught for 25 years, most recently in the area
of death and dying.
NHPCO’s
End-of-Life Doula Council promotes awareness and understanding of
the end-of-life doula role. The council is currently seeking feedback on the
role of end-of-life doulas in hospice; share your perspective now. To learn
more about end-of-life doulas, register
for the 2022 Virtual Interdisciplinary Conference to access the
on-demand content library through December 31, 2022 and view the session: “Workforce
Shortage is REAL…Doulas Offer Real Options.”