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Fifteen things you should know about hospice

Hospice focuses on life
When you have a life-limiting illness, Community Mercy Hospice offers compassionate, expert care that helps you to live each day to the fullest. Once the decision has been made to stop curative treatment, the focus is on attainable comfort rather than unachievable cure.
 
While end-of-life is obviously an extremely difficult part of the life cycle, it also provides special opportunities: to strengthen relationships, to put one’s affairs in order and to find spiritual peace. This is only possible, however, if the patient can find effective relief from the pain and symptoms characterizing the progression of life-limiting illness.
 
Hospice comes to you
When surveyed, more the 90 percent of Americans said they would prefer to die at home. Yet more than two-thirds die in nursing homes and hospitals.
 
Community Mercy Hospice is not a place; it is a comprehensive program of services that come to you. We want you to be as comfortable and alert as possible, spending precious time with your loved ones in familiar surroundings whether a private home, apartment or long-term facility.
 
Hospice Serves All
The Medicare hospice benefit covers all expenses involved in your hospice care. Hospice care also is covered under Medicaid and most private insurance plans. Contributions and memorials help community Mercy Hospice provide services that may not be reimbursed.
 
Hospice is expert medical care, but toward a different goal
The shift is from cure to comfort. Community Mercy Hospice patients work with a special team of health professionals with expertise in palliative care – a medical specialty devoted to relieving pain and managing symptoms, not to curing a disease. Few doctors and nurses outside of hospice have this specialized training.
 
Hospice cares for the patient and their loved ones.
When a patient is diagnosed with a life-limiting illness, everyone involved experiences periods of stress, uncertainty, doubt, worry and confusion. Community Mercy Hospice treats the patient and his or her loved ones –whoever the patient determines to be his or her family – as a single unit of care.
 
Hospice is on call 24 hours.
Besides regularly scheduled home visits, you can always talk by telephone to a nurse who is trained to assess unexpected situations. The nurse can answer your questions and ease your mind. When the situation warrants, a nurse can be dispatched to the home at any time. We can be reached by phone 24 hours a day, 365 days per year.
 
Hospice regards death as part of the continuum of life.
Hospice neither prolongs life nor hastens death. We provide personalized services, information and a caring community so that you and your family can make end-of-life a time that need not be filed with fear and anxiety
 
Hospice respects your decisions.
You may not be in control of your illness, but you are in control of your care. Recognizing that ignorance promotes fear, Community Mercy Hospice professionals provide the information you need to make informed, thoughtful decisions.
 
However, you and your loved ones make those choices. Because the nature of dying is unique, it is always our goal to be sensitive and responsive to the special requirements of your situation. We want you and your loved ones to remain in charge of your lives as possible.
 
Hospice is a team of compassionate, expert health professionals.
The hospice team includes your doctor, a registered nurse, certified nursing assistant, social worker, chaplain, and specially trained patient care volunteer(s).
 
With its range of expertise, the Community Mercy Hospice team can address the entire scope of end-of-life issues, taking a tremendous weight off your shoulders.
 
Hospice includes your doctor.
Your primary care physician will continue in that role signing off on all treatment orders and plans recommended by the hospice team.
 
Hospice means having a coach.
A good coach teaches, supports and demonstrates. Caring for a loved one at home involves learning many new skills. Community Mercy Hospice team members do a lot of teaching, showing caregivers how to change dressing, use a pain pump, bathe the patient, deliver medications on schedule, provide oral care and more.
 
Hospice helps with talking about difficult issues.
In addition to medical issues, legal and financial concerns often have to be addressed. These subjects can be scary, and most everyone feels anxious. To complicate things, many families have unresolved issues that can make communication difficult.
 
Unfortunately, these patterns tend to intensify during a crisis, increasing feelings of isolation and helplessness. The Community Mercy Hospice team can help open the lines of communication.
 
Hospice is an opportunity to attend to end-of-life concerns.
End-of-life can be a very special time for you and your family. With pain and symptoms under control, you can attend to several issues pressing for your attention:
  • Completing unfinished emotional issues
  • Saying goodbye
  • Making financial arrangements
  • Drawing up a will
  • Completing an advance medical directive
  • Searching for meaning in one’s life
  • Taking time to reflect & take inventory of one’s life
 
Hospice means flexibility.
You are never “locked in” to Community Mercy Hospice; you can opt out of hospice care at any time without penalty. In fact, when pain and symptoms are managed effectively, many patients show improvement. Sometimes a patient’s condition improves or stabilizes to the extent that he or she can temporarily do without hospice services.
 
Hospice patients are not necessarily bedridden, either. Thanks to expert pain and symptom management, we have patients who are able to fly across country to attend a special family event, to visit a cherished place and to enjoy simple pleasures like a walk in the park.
 
Hospice is help with grief.
For you and your loved ones, the grief process begins with the terminal diagnosis, as everyone begins to contemplate the many losses ahead. Community Mercy Hospice social worker helps to process this “anticipatory grief.” After death, we offer bereavement services, support groups and education to loved ones for 13 months.
 
Another benefit of hospice care: Caregivers often find the grieving process easier to manage after having been intimately involved in the end-of -life process.