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What is Hospice?
In its earliest origins, hospice was a place of shelter for travelers on a difficult
journey. For patients, families and friends faced with a terminal illness, hospice
means a place to turn and a team of people to be by your side.
Often people think of home care when they think of hospice, and in many ways it
is that, and more.
Hospice is an innovation in care built upon the concept of individual choice, and
one of the choices hospices provides is the ability for a patient with a life-limiting
illness to stay at home surrounded by family and friends.
Hospice brings together a team of specially trained professionals and volunteers
who work with the patient's doctor to provide a plan of care woven with the dignity
of choice and power of love.
Making no attempt to hasten or delay death, hospice focuses on controlling the patient's
pain and symptoms, while helping family and friends cope with the stress and emotions
illness can bring.
From the first days of a life-limiting illness to long past the loss of a loved one, Hospice offers a mainstay of resources and respite, help and hope to affirm
a meaningful quality of life for all at the journey's end.
What Is Hospice: The Hospice Promise
Hospice promises confidential comfort and care, compassion and counseling when it's
needed most and where patients most want to be—whether in a long-term care facility,
in-patient residence or at home.
Hospice promises to affirm the power of choice and preserve a quality of life in
every way possible.
Hospice promises to address the physical, emotional and spiritual needs of patients
and their families, with a deep respect for the patient's wishes at the heart of
it all.
Hospice promises to be there, to help and to care.
What Is Hospice: Hospice Philosophy and Goals
Hospice philosophy respects the rights of patient and family. It offers the right
to enjoy the highest quality of life possible:
- The right to die with dignity, as
dignity is perceived by the patient.
- The right to actively participate
in managing the remaining life span, the dying process and the event of death.
- The right to remain a viable family
member in the environment of choice.
- The right to have his/her needs
considered on a personal, individual basis.
Hospice strives to achieve excellence in its set objectives:
- Good physical care and relief of
pain and other symptoms during illness without great mental or physical incapacitation.
- Ongoing emotional support of patients
and family caregivers throughout illness.
- Support of the patient's participation
as an active family member by enabling them to remain at home and by offering services
to accommodate family relationships.
- Assistance to the patient and the
family in working through the grieving process and other issues involved in serious illness, changes in lifestyle and loss.
- Assistance with the family's healthy
resolution of bereavement issues up to a year or more after the death of the patient
as needed.
- Initiation and maintenance of an
ongoing community hospice education program to keep hospice available to the families,
friends and neighbors of our community.
Courtesy of American Hospice
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