Considering Hospice Care
You may want to consider
hospice care if:
- You have a disease or illness that is expected
to shorten your life.
- Treatment that tries to cure the disease or
prolong your life has become more of a burden than a benefit to
you.
- You would like to spend your remaining life as comfortably as
possible in a setting that you choose, such as your own home.
- You
want family and friends to participate in your care.
- You want your
loved one who has a terminal illness to die comfortably at home.
Some people who might benefit from hospice care do not
receive it for a variety of reasons. Many people, including some health
professionals, simply don't know much about hospice care. It can be difficult
for a doctor to acknowledge that a person is approaching the final stages of an
illness and to introduce the concept of hospice services. It can also be
difficult for you and your family to accept that the end of life is
approaching. Some families choose to pursue aggressive medical care up to the
end.
By choosing hospice, you decide to stop trying to cure your
illness and to focus instead on comfort and quality of life. If you are at
home, your hospice team will prepare your caregivers to cope with almost
anything that could happen at home. But this does not mean that you cannot go
to a hospital. When a hospice takes over your care, they will work with you to
arrange for any medical care that you need. If something happens that causes a
caregiver to call 911, you may be treated
in a hospital and later return to hospice care.
The Medicare
Hospice Benefit legislation, passed in 1982, pioneered the model for hospice
programs in the United States. Eligibility for most hospice programs, as
established by Medicaid, is based on two main criteria:
- Your condition is considered incurable. This is called a terminal
illness.
- Your doctor has indicated that your life expectancy is 6
months or less if your illness runs its normal course. A form must usually be
signed by your primary doctor as well as the medical director or physician
member of a hospice team.1
It can be hard for doctors to know how long a person will
live. Some people live longer than expected. If you live longer than 6 months,
you can continue on hospice. If your illness gets better, you can stop
receiving hospice care.
Hospices usually take patients who are
declining in their health and daily functioning. This means that the patient
may need help with activities of daily living and isn't eating or moving around
very well. The goal is to live out a natural life without artificial medical
assistance. Medical care is provided to give comfort rather than to prolong
life. For example, chemotherapy may no longer be used to cure your cancer, but
it may be given to reduce pain. People who want to live as long as possible by
any medical means are not a good match for hospice care.
Many
people who are living with a disease that has an unpredictable but still
terminal course may also want and be able to receive hospice care. In some of
these cases, Medicare might not cover hospice care costs. Medicare covers the
cost of hospice in the last 6 months of life. There are guidelines for terminal
diseases that have an unpredictable course. People who have
AIDS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS),
emphysema,
heart failure, kidney (renal) disease, or
Alzheimer's disease are all eligible for hospice care
when their disease has reached an advanced, terminal stage.
People of any age, including children, may receive hospice services. In
some areas, there are special hospice programs for children who have cancer or
other terminal diseases and for people who have AIDS.
Hospice
care programs do not discriminate. Care is provided regardless of age, sex,
religion, diagnosis or type of health problem, ethnic or cultural background,
sexual orientation, or ability to pay.
Many complex challenges
face a dying person. Treating physical symptoms alone does not take care of
emotional suffering or family upheaval. A recent study asked people what
aspects of their end-of-life care they considered most important. Overall, the
important factors included:2
- Pain and symptom control and assurance that
future pain and symptoms would be managed.
- Clear and participatory
decision making.
- Preparation for death, with full knowledge of the changes that
could occur.
- Completion, including spiritual peace, life review,
resolving conflicts, spending time with family and friends, and saying
good-bye.
- Contributing to the well-being of
others.
- Affirmation of the individual as a unique and whole
person.
Hospice care helps you address these challenges and
approach death as comfortably and with as much dignity as possible.