W drugiej połowie XX wieku zostały szerzej rozpowszechnione zasady
opieki paliatywno-hospicyjnej. Od tego momentu opieka paliatywna rozwija
się wielokierunkowo. Interesującym kierunkiem realizowania ideałów hospicyjnych
jest powstanie w różnych krajach programów łączących obszar więziennictwa
z opieką paliatywno-hospicyjną i wolontariatem. Stany Zjednoczone
dysponują bogatym doświadczeniem w więziennej opiece hospicyjnej
realizując w ten sposób ideę sprawiedliwego dostępu do opieki paliatywnej
grup marginalizowanych społecznie. Kolejnym pozamedycznym zadaniem
hospicjów jest podejmowanie istotnych społecznie zagadnień związanych
z sensem życia, wpływaniem na postawy wobec cierpienia i śmierci. Ten edukacyjny
walor hospicjów został wykorzystany przez polski system penitencjarny
w resocjalizacji osób pozbawionych wolności poprzez bezpośredni ich
kontakt z osobami chorymi terminalnie. Poniższa analiza pozwoli zapoznać
się z głównymi założeniami dotyczącymi współpracy zespołów opieki paliatywno-
hospicyjnej z osobami odosobnionymi.
This article presents the main assumptions concerning cooperation of hospice-palliative
care teams with convicts in the world and in Poland. In the United States, in the late
1980s, a system of prison hospice-palliative care has been created. Hospices inside prisons
are conducted by interdisciplinary teams, in which convicts-volunteers play an important
role, who are appropriately selected from prisoners and trained for their role. Similar
initiatives of voluntary service among convicts inside the penitentiary institutions have
been created in Europe as well. All parts benefit from these hospice volunteer programs:
administration and healthcare systems in prisons, seriously ill patients and sentenced people
who work as volunteers. Since 2002 in Poland continues experiment of new form of readaptation,
started in Gdansk Hospice, regarding prisoners-volunteers prepared to help
in hospice facility outside the penitentiary structure. Convicted by appropriate training
receive skills of medical volunteers and participate in the care of seriously ill. These
activities allow them to engage in social life towards the end of their sentence, as well as
to work after leaving the penitentiary institutions. After the successful implementation
of this project in Gdansk in years 2002-2007, in 2008-2009 the project has been
implemented in 15 centers of detention and hospice-palliative care in Poland. In 2009,
the project „WHAT – Volunteer hospice as a tool of acceptance and tolerance for those
leaving the penitentiary establishments” was awarded the Council of Europe for the best
design of the rehabilitation in Europe. In 2012, convicts trained to the voluntary service
exercised direct assistance for critically ill patients in 30 hospices and more than 100
nursing homes in Poland. Research shows that the inclusion of convicts to the hospice team
and their meeting with suffering and dying, improves their psychosocial functioning and their assessment of the meaning of life and plans after leaving the penitentiary facility.
Successful experiment of reintegration of sentenced-volunteers to care at the end of life
has been spotted by the European Association of Palliative Medicine, which published the
report and a preliminary study of this form of care in its scientific journal – European
Journal of Palliative Care. The full text of research and indications for further analysis
of this topic was published in Palliative Medicine in Practice in 2013. This publication
serves as information about a new category of tools – volunteering – in the system of
criminalization of social rehabilitation, probation and probation.