Older Adults
Home Health and Hospice Care
Home Health Care Overview

Many types of medical and social home health care services are available: nursing care, physical therapy, pharmacy services, transportation, and home-delivered meals.

Home Health Care Statistics

Medical conditions that most frequently require home health care include diabetes, heart failure, chronic ulcer of the skin, osteoarthritis, and hypertension.

Types of Home Health Care Services

The range of home health care services a patient can receive at home is limitless. Care can range from nursing care to specialized medical services such as laboratory work-ups.

Hospice Care Overview

Hospice care usually involves relieving symptoms and providing psychological and social support for the patient and family. The goal of hospice care is to provide the terminally ill patient peace, comfort, and dignity.

Hospice Care Statistics

Less than half of hospice recipients are cancer patients. The five leading non-cancer conditions admitted to hospice are end-stage heart disease, dementia, feebleness, lung disease, and end-stage renal disease.

Types of Hospice Care Services

The goal of hospice is to provide comfort and care, not "cure" the illness or disease. Types of hospice care services provided depend on the patient's needs and preferences.

Types of Home Health and Hospice Care Providers

Home health and hospice care can be provided by many different types of organizations, agencies, companies, and individuals. Choosing the service that is right for your family requires some research.

Paying for Home Health and Hospice Care

Home health care services may be paid for directly by the patient, through insurance coverage, or through other public or private sources. Most hospice care programs are provided to the patient regardless of the patient's ability to pay.

Choosing a Provider

When looking for a home health and hospice care provider, consider quality of care, availability of services, personnel training and expertise, and payer coverage.

Patient Rights

If you are unhappy with the home health or hospice care you are receiving, you should notify the provider's administrator, your state health department, and the Better Business Bureau.

Grief and Loss

Grief moves in and out of stages from disbelief and denial, to anger and guilt, to finding a source of comfort, to eventually adjusting to the loss.

Nurse checking patient's blood pressure in his home

Did You Know?

Hospice care isn't for everyone at the end of life. The decision to enroll in hospice depends not only on the person's medical condition, but also on his or her spiritual beliefs and approach to life, advises Elder Care Locator.