
Stories of volunteers supporting the health service since 1949

Jan O'Neill - Central London

Jan volunteered initially alongside a successful career in journalism. She has bought her professional skills in to her volunteering, and now produces the newsletter.
However, she was drawn to volunteering because she was interested in supporting patients, initially in the Macmillan Patient Support Center.
I’ve certainly learned a lot about human nature, and come to admire my fellow human beings very much because of the courage I’ve seen.
Interviewer
So, my name’s David Wood, I’m interviewing you today. Could I have your name?
Jan O’Neill
It’s Jan O’Neill.
Interviewer
And which Friends group are you associated with?
Jan O’Neill
Barts Guild.
Interviewer
And how old are you?
Jan O’Neill
I’m 72.
Interviewer
So, could we start by just you explaining a bit about what first inspired you to get involved in the Friends group?
Jan O’Neill
Well, it’s a bit like an arranged marriage, really. The inspiration and love came later. I was already volunteering at Barts, which I still do in the Macmillan Cancer Information Centre. And the Guild, I think, wanted a volunteer trustee.
Jan O’Neill
So the volunteer manager asked me if I’d like to do it. And I thought, well, how difficult can that be? Six meetings a year and sign a few cheques? Yes, I can do that. I wasn’t quite prepared for how actively I would be volunteering. And very quickly fell in love with the Guild hopelessly, completely and permanently.
Interviewer
And how long ago was that?
Jan O’Neill
It would be, let’s think probably 11 years.
Interviewer
Okay. Had you been sort of a lifelong volunteer in other settings or was this a new thing for you?
Jan O’Neill
Well, no, it was completely new because I had always had very absorbing jobs that were usually irregular hours. So there would have been no opportunity to volunteer.
Interviewer
And you say you still volunteer in the hospital for Macmillan as well?
Jan O’Neill
Oh yes.
Interviewer
So what’s the Macmillan role?
Jan O’Neill
Well, we have a Cancer Information centre. It’s manned by, two specialists, nurses and volunteers, usually two at a time. So there’s three of us and it’s open to any cancer patient. They come in. Sometimes they just want to chat with somebody that’s not wearing a hospital uniform and talk about what was on Eastenders, and, you know, and eventually they’ll tell you what’s really worrying them. Sometimes they’ll come in very distressed because they’ve had bad news.
Jan O’Neill
So it’s a cuddle and a cup of tea and take them in the kitchen and let them sit and calm themselves. Sometimes it’s relatives wanting to know the best thing they can do for their family member who is ill and the best bit is when they come in. You can always tell when a patient’s got the all clear, they glow and they come in and say, I’ve got the all clear and we all do a little dance and feel very happy. So it’s, it’s quite varied actually. And I’ve certainly learned a lot about human nature and come to admire, my fellow human beings very much because of the courage I’ve seen. It’s quite extraordinary how valiant cancer patients are.
Interviewer
Now, I’m always astounded by the variety of different volunteering opportunities there are in the hospitals. So you’ve described this marvelous, marvelous thing that’s done by volunteers to support people at a very challenging time in their life. But you also explained that the League of Friends was more than you expected it to be perhaps?
Jan O’Neill
Just a bit. Well, I knew that when I signed up that the Friends ran the hospital shop and did a trolley service, as I think most of these Friends do. And I rather thought that was probably it, but I found that the Guild was deeply embedded in Bart’s culture. You know, it was really truly part of the hospital. And when I joined, we were, I think, a year off our centenary year. So there was a lot of planning around that to have this enormous concert and various other events. And I got involved with that and I enjoyed it very much.
Jan O’Neill
We then tried to replicate a Hogarth fair, which was probably the early thirties with Lady Sainsbury running the grocery store. That sort of thing. It wasn’t quite the Hogarthian ideal. We didn’t have a gin stool sadly, but there you go. It was great fun. We made some money and, you know, we have Christmas fairs, you know, that sort of thing. There are lots of things, but what I do mostly is organise the Guild’s Christmas concert and produce the Guild’s twice yearly magazine. So, which is quite useful. So I’m using skills I had in my working life.
Interviewer
Excellent. So your volunteering has very much brought your professional skills into your role?
Jan O’Neill
Oh absolutely. It’s nice to have them used, you know, and you know, mostly people are very helpful. We get a lot of, sometimes solicited, sometimes unsolicited contributions for the magazine. So it’s the agony of sometimes editing without offence, but it’s mostly, they’re very good. And, you know, it’s good, fun.
Interviewer
And I have a sneaky suspicion that I have one that’s arrived on my desk this week for me to read.
Jan O’Neill
And that, that’s another thing with the Guild, which is endlessly fascinating. Our patron is the Duke of Gloucester who is very involved. I mean, he often visits the hospitals. Some of our shop volunteers continue to work, you know, throughout lockdown.
Jan O’Neill
They used to walk into work from the East End, they were wonderful and really kept things going. And his Highness very kindly phoned them and had a long chat with them to thank them for what they were doing. And I think that’s astonishing to have a patron that’s so active, you know, and he, he opens things and, you know, turns up for events, but he really is very, very involved, very involved and very supportive of the volunteers.
Interviewer
And volunteers enjoy that recognition, don’t they?
Jan O’Neill
Oh, I think some of them are absolutely thrilled to meet him, you know, he is a nice man and, you know, he had, if you like, a real job, you know, he was an architect. So I think he does understand the world of work perhaps better than some people in these sort of positions do, so…
Interviewer
So, do you think there’s still a need for Friends groups in the NHS today?
Jan O’Neill
Oh goodness. Yes. Because part of the Guild’s aims is to provide amenities for patients not supplied by the National Health Service. And, you know, if the friends aren’t there raising money and doing jobs that would never be paid jobs. I mean, if the shop was taken over by WH Smith, then of course it would be a paid job, but I doubt the National Health Service would have money to take on staff. You know, it’s things like that. And particularly during the pandemic, it’s been such a blessing for the staff as well as patients to have the shop there. That is not going to happen, you know, if it’s done commercially, I don’t think, um, so that’s important.
Jan O’Neill
I think it’s also, you know, we have a lot of fun, the hospital enjoys some of the things that we do. You wouldn’t get that commercially either, you know, it’s, it just, it’s just part of the hospital. I think it’s part of any hospital. You know, we’ve been visiting a friend in Northwick Park Hospital quite frequently, as he’s always being hospitalised and they’ve got an enormous Friends area there and just the same sort of people, you know, really keen on what they’re doing. Well, they’re only selling greetings cards and chocolate, but they, you know, you might be going into Harrods. It’s wonderful.
Interviewer
They do, they’re very different in each hospital and they do some lovely things. So just the other question, that’s coming to my mind because I’m thinking we’re sitting, talking to you. Yes, geographically, we’re a reasonable distance from Barts. It’s not like you’re a local, Barts is a local district hospital and you all live in a community around it. What draws people to Barts do you think to volunteer?
Jan O’Neill
Oh, well I’ve loved the building all my life. My father worked in Fleet Street and we used to go for lovely walks around the city and we used to walk through the square at Barts and there’d be the nurses in their lovely hats. And, you know, I always thought it was wonderful place, but actually I volunteered originally, tried to volunteer at the local hospital, Whipps Cross.
Jan O’Neill
And the volunteer organiser was in a, in a bit of a tizz at the time. I think she was having problems. And she said, well, look, why don’t you try Barts? So I thought Yes that’ll do, 20 minutes on the train. Lovely. So, oh, and of course I am a grateful patient. I had my thyroid treated there years ago, so I knew it was an excellent hospital, which, you know, helps when you’re tired. You think we’ll do it. Yes.
Interviewer
Excellent. And is there anything else that I haven’t asked you that you were thinking beforehand that you’d like to tell us about?
Jan O’Neill
Ooh, actually, it’s the fun you have as a volunteer group, you know the Guild does make sure there’s fun. We have the wonderfully named helpers tea every year, which, you know, I imagine in the past was a hospital sheets laid on a table and the tea and buns, a little more sophisticated, but I think one of my best Guild memories is going to that and hearing this totally inspirational talk from a TA, Queen Alexandra’s volunteer, she’s a sister in a hospital, but she does that too. And about her service in Afghanistan and, you know, I wanted to train for nursing immediately and then thought, dont be silly. You’re much too old, but it’s things like that. You know, there are lots of nice events. I wish we could do more actually, because, you know, um, it brings us all together I think, as a group.
Interviewer
And out of interest, have you managed to keep in touch with other volunteers throughout this whole lockdown period? Has that relationship continued?
Jan O’Neill
So, yes. I mean, it’s, I’m still on the management committee although I’ve done my six years services as a trustee and we have kept in touch and I, our chairman was very keen that everybody, as much as they could emailed or phoned some of the older members, you know, who probably didn’t get out so much, you know, we’ve tried to remain a family. Our previous chairman used to say to people coming to meetings, welcome to the family. It’s a dysfunctional family, but it’s a family.
Interviewer
That’s great.
Jan O’Neill
And it has got that feeling. Yes.
Interviewer
Excellent. Well, thank you ever so much. This has been lovely. Thank you.
| Contributor: | Jan O'Neill |
| Recorded on: | 12 January 2022 |
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| Setting: | Hospital |
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The Guild of St Bartholomew’s is a group of volunteers established to ‘help the Hospital by personal service and by the provision of such amenities for the patients, staff, and students that would not be available for them under the NHS.’ While the hospital staff tend to the medical needs of the patients, the Guild tends to their spiritual ones.

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