Receiving Hospice Care
Hospice is a comprehensive program with services for
people who are seriously ill and not expected to recover. When you decide to be
cared for by a hospice program, you acknowledge that your treatment goals will
shift from doing everything possible to cure your condition to helping make the
rest of your life as comfortable and high-quality as possible.
You do not need to be bedridden or in a hospital to benefit from
hospice care. No matter what your physical condition, hospice services focus on
keeping you as comfortable, functional, and alert as possible. If needed, these
services may include help with bathing, dressing, and eating as well as
medicine and treatment for all symptoms, including pain and anxiety.
Hospice teams, which consist of medical professionals, counselors,
therapists, social workers, spiritual advisors, home health aides, and trained
volunteers, are available to address your ongoing concerns and needs. Your team
can:
- Assist with
advance directive forms. This may include documenting
your preferences regarding life support and cardiopulmonary resuscitation
(CPR).
- Answer questions about palliative treatments, which are
designed to relieve pain and other symptoms.
- Help you determine
what is important in terms of putting your legal and financial affairs in
order.
- Help you and your family communicate and deal with
unresolved issues.
- Give your caregivers a break (respite care). Trained volunteers
may be available to relieve your loved ones for a few hours a week. If your
caregivers need a longer break or must be away to attend a special event, some
hospices provide respite care for several days.
Counseling and support services that hospice provides can help you:
- Resolve differences with family and friends or
say important things that may otherwise go unsaid.
- Complete
relationships.
- Review your life.
- Explore spiritual
issues.
Hospice care also includes helping your family and friends through
their grief after you die. Most programs continue to provide bereavement
services for family and friends, such as support groups and counseling, for at
least a year after a loved one's death.