Hospice care is a special kind of care given to patients who are in the final stages of a terminal disease or near the end of life. This type of care focuses on keeping the patient comfortable and providing relief from symptoms, rather than on active treatment. Providing care with compassionate, hospice care aims at maintaining the quality of life of patients as their disease progresses and they near the end.
Hospice care is all about ensuring that the person’s final days are spent in comfort and with dignity. It also ensures that the person gets enough time with their family members and people they love.
It addresses the following needs of a patient:
Aims At Ensuring the patient can live as fully and comfortably as possible Managing the symptoms of the disease |
Doesn’t Aim At Either hastening or delaying death Treating the disease itself |
1.4 million
Figures published in 2015 by CDC |
83% patients
Data by National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization in 2013 |
70% families
Data by National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization in 2012 |
Here are a few signs that your loved one may require hospice care:
As many as 83% of patients receiving hospice care in the US comprise of ages above 65 old. While cancer is still the largest diagnoses of patients in hospice care, those with dementia have increased significantly.
No one wants to see their loved one pass on. This is what makes many families sometimes wait too long before calling hospice care for help. However, you need to remember that hospice can make the final days and weeks of your loved one’s life more comfortable, because with hospice they start receiving care from professionals who have experience with providing these types of specialized services.
Remember that there are several options to pay for hospice care. Medicare alone paid close to $16 billion for hospice care in 2015, taking the average payment per beneficiary to more than $11,000.
Hospice care improves the quality of life of your loved one as well as the lives of the family member who had so far been the primary caregivers. It’s best to consult a hospice professional to know when it’s time to choose such services for a loved one.
Learn more about VNA of Ohio hospice services, or call us at 1-877-698-6264.
Sources
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/hospice-care.htm
https://www.wesleylife.org/blog/news/20-stats-to-know-about-hospice-care-in-the-us.aspx
https://www.verywellhealth.com/hospice-facts-and-stats-197512
https://www.cancer.org/treatment/end-of-life-care/hospice-care/what-is-hospice-care.html
https://www.asccare.com/10-signs-its-time-for-hospice/
https://www.compassus.com/for-caregivers/signs-it-may-be-time-for-hospice