Home Health Care Services
…Patient, family and caregiver support services that keep the patient comfortable, teach caregivers to provide care and offer emotional and spiritual support.
In your own home - Hospice Home Care
Taking control on your own terms. Hospice services are provided on a scheduled basis by the hospice team, which includes nurses, social workers, spiritual care counselors, home health aides, and trained community volunteers. Emergency Care is available 24 hours per day, 7 days a week. Hospice is always just a phone call away. Hospice offers compassion, control and choice.
- Skilled, compassionate care from nurses and home health aides making intermittent visits.
- Management of pain and other physical symptoms through the appropriate use of medications and teachings.
- Training, advising and skill-building for those persons who will assist in providing patient care.
- Emotional support and spiritual counseling for the patient, family and caregivers.
- Integrated therapies (CAM, occupational, physical, etc.).
- Companionship and assistance visits provided by dedicated, trained community volunteers.
- Grief counseling services are available to families and caregivers for up to 13 months following the death of their loved one. Additional services are available on an ongoing basis.
Facing a life-limiting illness can
be devastating - physically, emotionally, and spiritually. Patients
and caregivers must deal with complex questions and choices about
treatments, medications, and pain management. If a patient has made
the choice to pursue aggressive or life-extending treatment for a
progressive or incurable illness, and desires pain management or
symptom control at home, the Palliative Home Health Care Program
of The Center for Hospice and Palliative Care, Inc. may be a suitable
choice.
What is Palliative Home Health Care?
Facing a serious illness is never easy - physically,
emotionally, or spiritually. Patients and caregivers
must deal with complex questions and choices about
treatments, medications, and pain management.
If a patient has made the choice to pursue life-extending
treatment for a progressive or incurable illness, and
desires pain management or symptom control at home,
The Palliative Care Program may be a suitable choice.
Palliative care is pain management and symptom
control for patients who may be currently seeking
life-extending treatments. It is offered through our
licensed home health care program, and many aspects
of palliative care are applicable early in the course of an
illness. The goal of palliative care is the achievement of
the highest quality of life for patients and their families.
Each patient in our program has access to our team of
nurses, home health aides, social workers/family support
services, spiritual care counselors and trained volunteers.
How is the Palliative Home Health Care Program different from
the Hospice Program?
Our Hospice Care Program requires a physician to
certify that a patient’s terminal illness carries a life
expectancy of six months or less if the disease runs its
normal course. Hospice patients have chosen not to
pursue curative treatments. However, our Palliative Care
Program offers comfort care for patients who may be
seeking life-prolonging therapies for their progressive
or incurable illnesses, and may have a life expectancy
of more than six months. An interdisciplinary team will
determine on a case-by-case basis whether a patient is
eligible for this program. Palliative care includes pain
and symptom management, as well as emotional and
spiritual support, if requested.
Does insurance pay for the Palliative Home Health Care Program?
Coverage may be available under the home health
benefits of Medicare, Medicaid, or private insurance. If
these insurance options do not apply, a self-pay program
is available and is administered on a sliding fee scale. No
one is ever turned away due to an inability to pay.
Who is eligible for Hospice care?
Admission into the palliative home health care program is made
without regard to age, gender, race, religion, disability, sexual
orientation, diagnosis or ability to pay for services. No one is
ever turned away due to the inability to pay. However, certain
criteria must be met prior to receiving services:
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The patient must have a progressive or incurable illness.
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Patients with both cancer and non-cancer illnesses are appropriate.
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The patient's personal physician must agree to continue managing
the patient's care, or the patient may choose the Hospice Medical
Director as their attending physician.
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The patient must be living in our service area, which includes
St. Joseph, Marshall, Elkhart, Fulton, Kosciusko, LaGrange,
LaPorte and Starke Counties in Indiana.
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