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FAQ

Hospice Care is a compassionate form of care that is designed to provide non-curative treatment and comfort for those who are facing a life-limiting illness. It offers a support system of medical, social, psychological, and spiritual services that promotes dignity and affirms quality of life. This comprehensive and specialized care allows the patient, family, and other loved ones to make choices about what is important to them.

In most cases, a family member serves as the primary caregiver and helps make decisions for a loved one. The caregiver works with the professional, experienced members of the hospice care team to develop a plan to provide treatment, support, personal care and a number of specialized services for both the patient and family. Our hospice care team is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to provide assistance in managing your individual needs.The Hospice Care Team includes:

  • Patient and Family
  • Attending Physician
  • Hospice Care Physician
  • Hospice Care Nurses
  • Home Health Aides
  • Social Workers
  • Physical, Speech, and Occupational Therapists
  • Volunteers
  • Spiritual Counselors
  • Bereavement Counselors

The hospice care benefit is intended primarily for any individual with a terminal illness whose life expectancy is six months or less, should the illness run its usual course. However, the Medicare program recognizes that not all terminal illnesses have a predictable course; therefore, the benefit is available for extended periods of time beyond six months.

Anyone can make a referral for hospice care services. You should feel free to talk with your doctor, your minister, or a trusted friend when making this decision. You also may choose to contact us to learn more about our services and to arrange for a meeting in your home to discuss the program. We are also available to meet with you and provide care in local hospitals, or in extended-stay facilities, such as nursing homes and assisted living centers.

The best time to discuss hospice care is before an illness strikes. By law, the decision to elect hospice care belongs to the patient and/or his or her legal guardian. If you are not comfortable discussing this decision with a loved one, contact your physician or contact us. We are always available to assist you in discussing your options and helping with your advance care planning. Most often we hear from our patients and families “We wish we would have started Hospice sooner”

Most physicians are familiar with hospice care. However, if your physician would like to receive more information about our services, we would be glad to reach out and provide this educational outreach as part of our mission. Hospice care information also is available from the National Hospice Palliative Care Organization, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Hospice Center and many other health organizations.

Yes. You may keep your personal physician while you are under hospice care. Hospice care reinforces the primary physician/patient relationship and considers this bond to be a high priority.

Once you have made a decision to select hospice care, a representative will contact you to discuss the program and to determine your eligibility. Your physician will then be contacted to discuss your decision. Finally, you will be asked to sign certain forms that are similar to the ones that you would sign before receiving any other special medical treatments or services.

Hospice care recognizes that different patients require different levels of care, and we respond by offering the category of care that meets the individual patient’s needs – in the location that is most appropriate and comfortable. These categories of hospice care include:

Routine Home Care

We believe in bringing care to wherever you call home, whether it is your private home, and Assisted Living facility or a Skilled Nursing facility and we strive to provide an environment of care that is comfortable for our patients and their families. Our team of professionals schedule regular home visits to ensure that medical, social and emotional needs are met.

Inpatient Care

If pain or symptoms cannot be controlled at home, the patient might be taken to a hospital. When the symptoms are under control, the patient can return home.

Respite Care

Many patients have their own caregivers, often family members. When caregivers need a rest from their caregiving responsibilities, patients can stay in a hospital or other inpatient care center for up to five days. This also allows caregivers the opportunity to travel for family weddings, funerals or other special events and not have to worry about their loved one’s care.

Continuous Care

Sometimes a patient has a medical crisis that needs close medical attention. When this happens, we can arrange for inpatient care, or may be able to provide round-the-clock care in the home until symptoms are back under control.. When the crisis is over, the patient can return to routine care in the home.Can a hospice care patient who shows signs of recovery be returned to regular medical treatment? Yes. If a patient’s condition improves, and the disease goes into remission, the patient can be discharged from hospice care and returned to regular medical treatment. Likewise, should the patient ever need to return to hospice care in the future, these services could be resumed at the patient’s request. In fact, many of our patients do get better under our care, and we firmly believe that no patient should ever have to choose between the hospice care benefit and hope for recovery.

No. It is not necessary for someone to be with the patient all the time. However, it is recommended that someone be with the patient as often as possible in the later stages of care.

The dying process can be very emotional and scary, especially when you’re caring for someone you love. Our job is to make it easier and make sure you have the information, education, training and support to get through these hard times. Nights can be especially difficult and they may sometimes seem very long. However, our Hospice Care team is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, when you need us. You’ll never be alone.

Hospice Volunteers are a special group of people that give their time and talents to help address the greatest needs of our patients and their families. They are available to visit with you, provide support and help run errands. They also can assist with daily activities, and they may read, write letters, or reminisce with you and your loved ones about life’s many experiences. Their support both enhances the quality of life for patients and helps to relieve some of the demands that are often placed on caregivers.

Yes. All Hospice Care can be provided in a nursing home, if the facility has a written agreement to provide these services to their residents. In addition to the standard services provided by the nursing home or another care facility, residents will receive specialized visits from our Hospice Care team, including nurses, home health aides, chaplains, social workers and volunteers.

Our hospice care nurses and doctors use the latest and most effective medications and devices to treat all forms of pain and to relieve symptoms. At CHI Health at Home, we believe that emotional and spiritual pain is just as real as physical pain, and we have specialists who are trained in a choice of therapy options, to help maintain comfort. Various counselors, including clergy, also are available to assist family members and patients in dealing with their illness. Our hospice care specialists work as an integrated team with the patient and family in managing pain and symptoms in a way that brings more life and greater quality to each and every day.

Our hospice care team members are specialists in managing pain and symptoms related to life-limiting illnesses. Using a combination of medications, counseling, and therapies, most people can attain a level of comfort that is acceptable to them.

Usually not. The goal of hospice care is to help individuals live as actively as possible, free of pain or discomfort.

Hospice care is widely available and covered by Medicare Part A. It is also covered by Medicaid in most states, as well as by many other private or managed care insurance providers, usually with no out-of-pocket costs, deductibles, or co-pays. Services covered by Medicare include:

  • Medications for symptom management and pain relief
  • Medical equipment and supplies
  • Physician services
  • Nursing care
  • Home health aide and homemaker services
  • Social worker services
  • Physical, occupational and speech therapy
  • Nutritional, spiritual and grief counseling
  • Short-term general inpatient care and respite care

Yes. All Hospice Care can be provided in a nursing home, if the facility has a written agreement to provide these services to their residents. In addition to the standard services provided by the nursing home or another care facility, residents will receive specialized visits from our Hospice Care team, including nurses, home health aides, chaplains, social workers and volunteers.

Provided wherever a patient calls home, is available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, at no cost to eligible patients with Medicare, Medicaid or most commercial insurance through most providers. These services include:

  • All medicines, medical equipment and supplies related to the hospice care diagnosis
  • Medication management to control pain and symptoms
  • Physician services to manage medications
  • Nursing and home health aide visits to provide direct care
  • Support through social work, counseling and chaplain services
  • Volunteer services to provide companionship
  • Bereavement services for a minimum of 13 months after a loss

We will help you determine what you need and assist you in obtaining any special equipment or making any changes to your home if need be.

Yes bereavement support for caregivers and families is available for up to 13 months following the death of a loved one. This is provided in a variety of ways, direct mailings, phone calls, visits, support groups depending on the wishes of the recipient.