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From the Department of Health and Human Services Center
for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS):

  • “The Medicare program recognizes that terminal
    illnesses do not have predictable courses; therefore,
    the benefit is available for extended periods of time
    beyond six (6) months provided that proper
    certification is made at the start of each coverage
    period.”
  • “Physicians, hospitals and skilled nursing facilities are
    urged to recommend hospice care to beneficiaries
    whom they determine may benefit from it.”
  • “The certification of terminal illness of an individual
    who elects hospice shall be based on the physician’s
    or medical director’s clinical judgment regarding the
    normal course of the individual’s illness.”

What Your Patients Want

  • 83% of Americans want to die at home, cared for by loved
    ones and supported by in-home health care professionals,
    according to findings of a national survey presented to
    National Hospice and Palliative Care Organizations in
    November of 2004.
  • 88% of respondents said they would consider using hospice if they or someone they knew were terminally ill.
  • 98% of respondents whose family had previously been served
    by hospice said it was a positive experience.
    Respondents said the most important aspects of a good death were:
    • Dying with family members present
    • Dying with dignity
    • Dying pain free
    • Dying with benefit of spiritual counseling

    Referenced from: Quality of Life Matters.
    End-of-Life care news & clinical findings for
    physicians. Vol. 6, Issue 4 Feb/Mar/Apr 2005.

From the AMA website, H-140.966 Decisions Near the End of Life: ”Physicians have an obligation to relieve pain and suffering and to promote the dignity and autonomy of dying patients in their care. This includes providing effective palliative treatment even though it may foreseeably hasten death.“

 



Referenced from: In Search of A Good Death:
Observations of Patients, Families and Providers; Steinhauser et al.
Annals Internal Medicine 2000; 132: 825-832.

 

 


"From our first breath, we are each born to die. As a nurse and ordained chaplain, I have been privileged to walk with many wonderful people to the Valley of the Shadow of Death. But then came the pending death of my beloved Richard Ray. When our doctor stated it was time for hospice, my husband became very withdrawn. Hospice for him meant all had been done and it was time to die.
This was far from the truth as he was soon to find out. Our experience was a long way from gloom and doom to a truly wonderful, memorable and cherished time. Such compassionate, caring individuals provided quality, up-to-date care. I have only one regret: that we didn't call hospice sooner."

Rosemary Hanley, RN, Ordained Chaplain.

 

“Patients are not looking for better end-of-life care,” says Susan LeGrand, a palliative-care physician at The Cleveland Clinic. “They‘re looking for not having to die.” Doctors, patients and families all avoid talking about death--and the need for patients to make their own decisions about how it happens--until the end is very near. ” Because they won‘t talk about it,” says Sloan-Kettering‘s Foley, ”patients get themselves into circumstances where they don’t want to be.”

Kathleen Foley, Neurologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York. Referenced in Forbes Magazine, from www.forbes.com, August 19, 2004, "Must We Die In Pain?" by Matthew Herper.

 

Hospice works to honor the wishes of those Americans with terminal illness who prefer to die in their own homes and on their own terms.

 

In 2003, of those who died under hospice care:


In contrast, of all Americans who died in 2003:


Non-cancer diagnoses continue to
rise along with the number of patients
served by hospice


Referenced from: Quality of Life Matters.
End-of-Life care news & clinical findings
for physicians. Vol. 6, Issue 4 Feb/Mar/Apr 2005.

© 2005 Community Hospices of America. All rights reserved.