November is National Hospice and Palliative Care Month, and hospices across the country are reaching out to raise awareness about the highest quality care for all people coping with life-limiting illness.
Hospice is not a place. Hospice is a program of care that provides pain management, symptom control, psychosocial support, and spiritual care to patients, their families, loved ones and caregivers when a cure is not possible.
Here is a short list of some of the most common “myths” people have about hospice care and the facts about each one.
Myth: Is it too early for hospice if the patient feels good or doesn’t have pain?
Fact: Not necessarily. The patient’s prognosis, along with the desire for comfort and support should justify a hospice referral. Receiving hospice care early helps the patient live a better quality of life than waiting until the patient is suffering and in pain.
Myth: The patient and family must be ready for hospice or ready to accept the patient’s impending death.
Fact: Denial is an accepted coping mechanism. However, it is important that the patient and family be aware that the purpose of hospice is not to cure, but to care.
Myth: Hospice is expensive.
Fact: Hospice is free, paid for by Medicare and major insurance companies. We do not deny care to anyone because of inability to pay.
Myth: Hospice is only for the sick family member.
Fact: Hospice supports family members with their emotional needs and helps educate caregivers on how to best care for the loved one at home. Hospice also offers free bereavement services for up to 13 months after the death of a loved one.
Myth: A patient must die within six months or they are not eligible for hospice.
Fact: This is not true. Eligibility requirements state that a doctor must certify that the patient has six months or less to live if the disease runs its normal course. Many patients outlive the six-month timeline and continue to receive hospice care.
Myth: Is hospice only for cancer patients?
Fact: No. Hospice care is available for all terminally ill people no matter what the disease. Some of the most common non-cancer diseases are congestive heart failure, dementia and chronic lung disease.
Hospice is essentially a philosophy of care that accepts death as the final stage of life; just as birth is the beginning. The goal of Hospice Services is to enable patients to spend their last days with dignity and enjoy a quality of life surrounded by their loved ones.
For more information about the care that Hospice Services of Lake County provides and to answer any questions, please visit our website at www.lakecountyhospice.org or call 707-263-6222.