How Hospice Works

How Hospice Works

How Hospice Works | brokeGIRLrich

Hospice is a thing where everything you need to take care of someone magically appears for no cost. It’s like amazing fairy elves who show up with morphine and hospital beds at the snap of your fingers, er… or the dial of a phone.

I always thought hospice was like a hospital where you went to die. In the last few weeks, I’ve actually learned a lot more about it. Hospice is a much bigger bubble than just a building.

Should you or someone you love be diagnosed with a terminal illness, once options to fight it have been exhausted, you will be advised to get in touch with hospice.

Contacting hospice is a way of switching over your medical care from your primary and specialist physicians to the hospice system. Once you decide to make the switch, you no longer contact any of your previous doctors or go to the hospital anymore. You don’t call 911 for emergencies. All care is provided by hospice. If you have Medicare or Medicaid, hospice treatment is almost 100% covered (extended room and board in long term care facilities is usually one of the things that is not). If you have private coverage, you need to check the terms of your coverage, although hospice coverage is included in most health care plans.

There are four levels of hospice care: routine home care, continuous home care, general inpatient care and respite care. 

Routine home care is the level that most patients start with. At this stage a registered nurse will visit you in your home 1-2 times per week to help monitor your pain management. Hospice may arrange for continued treatment with any specialists you had, but that’s done under hospice’s direction now. A social worker is assigned to your case and will check in weekly with you and any family you may be living with. A home health aid may be assigned to your case and start visiting 2-3 times per week to help you with any activities your starting to struggle with, like bathing. All necessary medications and medical equipment will be delivered to your home as part of hospice care – so no more stops at CVS or Walgreens to fill prescriptions. If you request a counseling service, they will set you up with one.

I’ve heard only good things about people’s experience with hospice home health care aids. Unfortunately, our experience with the home health aid’s they set us up with was horrific. My mom was actually my grandmother’s primary care giver, but in an effort to keep on being able to work a little longer once she began to decline, we arranged for a home health aid during school hours. My grandmother was at the stage where she sort of still knew what was going on, but was getting really weak and falling down a lot… unfortunately, she also still thought she could walk.

With the first home health aid, she tried to get out of bed and fell of the floor. The aid wasn’t strong enough to pick her up (even though she weighed a whopping 90 pounds soaking wet at this point), so her solution was to sit on the floor next to her for the next 4 hours until someone came home. This was absolutely ridiculous. It was ridiculous to send a home health aid who isn’t strong enough to help pick someone up, but even more ridiculous that the aid didn’t know to call the main hospice number to get someone to come help them. Fail #1.

So my mom took a few days off of a work and arranged an aid through a different company. By this time, they had switched my grandmother to steroids and, let me tell you, steroid rage is real. And my grandmother decided she didn’t really trust anyone. So in a fit of energy, she managed to break free from the aid and throw my mom’s coffee maker across the kitchen… then a few other appliances and items followed it. This spooked the aid and it was agreed they probably weren’t the best choice to work with her. Fail #2.

Our only success story was the amazing, amazing woman who came on our third attempt about two weeks later, who my grandmother actually let help her… I think it was because she offered to curl her hair for her. She literally died about 30 minutes after the aid got her all dolled up. It was like she was waiting for someone to just put her in order. Success.

Seriously though, if you’re Central Jersey based and need a home health care aid – work with Bonjour. They were the only company around here that had it together.

Continuous home care was actually not a step we ever reached. If you needed someone to live in your home with you to assist you, this would be that step. Sometimes it’s a temporary situation, like your pain management plan has stopped working, you can’t stop vomiting, etc. This state gets reevaluated every 24 hours, but as long as you’re in it, someone will stay at your home with you. Honestly, we really should’ve taken advantage of this, because when they put my grandmother on steroids, she stopped sleeping and kept trying to get out of bed at night.

One morning my mom woke up and my grandmother, who couldn’t even sit up on her own the night before, was standing in front of the refrigerator in a daze, taking out all the vegetables and putting them in the sink. Aside from being like something out of a horror movie, she seriously could’ve hurt herself, especially if she got out of the house. At that point, continuous home care would’ve been merited. Instead my aunt flew in from Florida to help my mom and I took the week off of work and we rotated taking care of her between us.

In continuous home care, all other visits continue, often with more frequency. The registered nurse might start dropping by daily. Even more medication might be dropped off.

Clearly as we didn’t even reach continuous home care, we never experienced general inpatient care either. At this stage, it may be too difficult to control the symptoms of what is occurring at home. The patient is then admitted to a hospice owned or rented facility. Some hospices have their own stand-alone buildings and others rent wings or floors of hospitals or nursing homes.

We did use several days of respite care. The thing about taking care of a dying family member at home is that you don’t always know what you’re doing… and by don’t always know what you’re doing, I mean you are totally freaking clueless at times. And it is just endlessly stressful and horrific. Respite care is actually more for the family than the patient, but it allows you to admit the patient for 5 days of inpatient care at a facility so you can get some rest.

This sounds a little selfish when someone you love is dying, but this can be a several week/month long process and sometimes you genuinely just need to get some sleep or to know that someone actually competent is looking over the person you love.

The interesting thing about these services is how comprehensive they are. Thanks to my grandmother’s Medicare coverage, we could call the hospice phone number and ask for pretty much anything we needed and it would show up. She started having trouble walking to the bathroom? A wheelchair turned up an hour and a half later. She started having trouble breathing while lying down? A hospital bed was delivered and assembled before dinner time. We never paid a penny for any of this. The R.N. assigned to us was also terrific. We could call her anytime to ask questions and she was here whenever we needed anything.

As I understand it, their counseling services are pretty comprehensive as well, but she wasn’t interested in taking advantage of them. There is an old friend of the family who went to high school with my grandfather who is now a Monsignor who stopped by regularly to check in on her and that seemed to be enough for her.

Furthermore, if you don’t have medical coverage, hospice’s will often provide treatment for a nominal fee or free of charge. LOTS of the people who work for the hospice are volunteers. Those speedy delivery guys bringing us hospital beds and morphine? All volunteers.

Hospice’s also rely a lot on donations to be able to provide these services. The vast majority of people we came in contact with had gone through the death of a love one and experienced the benefits of hospice themselves and wanted to donate their time.

So if you’re interested in donating to a hospice with questionable home health care aid choices, but otherwise excellent service, we used the Center for Hope (which is just the cheesiest name, isn’t it?).

Hopefully you’ll never need to know any of this information I just wrote down, but if you do, you can at least go into it with a little more understanding than my family or I had.

19 thoughts on “How Hospice Works

  1. My life coach is a hospice volunteer in San Francisco and has done it for almost a decade now. I am always blown away by his stories and his compassion for those as they are nearing the end of this life. His sole focus is to be with people in their final days, to bring them comfort and help them achieve a “good death.” A good death is one where your body passes gently instead of fighting death. Thanks for sharing your hospice stories and bringing attention to the fact that they could always use donations.
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  2. Thanks for sharing your story and such great information, Mel. Your grandmother’s decline was pretty fast, but it’s probably better for her and all of you. That’s too bad about the four hour sit on the floor though. #nasty

    We had similar at home hospice care for my aunt with terminal cancer. My Mum stayed there too but she really needed the help because it is very stressful. We also took turns going over to stay with Mum, but she never wanted to leave. My aunt wanted to die at home. I had a business trip and was going to cancel it and my aunt said “no you go”. I can’t remember now if it was 1 or 2 weeks. Anyways, as soon as I got back I went straight to her apartment from the airport and she was all cheerful and sitting up, looked good really. Then the next day she went into a partial coma which lasted only a day and a half. It’s like she was waiting for me to come home and then she could go. {sniff}
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    • Yeah, everything about the death of a loved one is rough. We were lucky though that the decline was really fast – for everyone. I have to imagine my grandmother would’ve wanted it fast at that point too. The uncertainty of everything certainly adds to the stress.

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  4. I didn’t know there were four different types of hospice care. It is good to learn more about each one. I have five grandparents right now that I am a little worried about. Doing research like this really helps comfort me. Thanks for sharing.

  5. Good breakdown of the different levels of home care. It’s good to start small, with routine care to get your loved one acclimated. Thanks so much for sharing.

  6. Like you, I did not understand much about how hospice worked. I am glad that you mentioned that routine home care was the level that most patients started with, because it seems like it would be the easiest for me to adjust to. The best benefit you mention, for me, is that hospice will take care of prescriptions entirely! I’m so glad that this benefit is available to people struggling with health and chronic pain. Thank you for the article!

  7. It is interesting that there are more levels to hospice than just one. It makes sense that different people in different situations would require different levels of care. I will have to remember that there are ways of easing into it if my parents ever end up needing something like this.

  8. It’s nice that there are several levels of hospice care, depending on your needs. It can be scary for you and your loved ones if they are sent to a senior home or some other medical facility to live under other people’s constant care. However, routing home care is a great way for people to maintain most of their independence while still getting the care that they need. Thanks for the information!

  9. Thank you so much for taking the time to share your story. My grandfather is going through hospice right now. It’s been very hard for him and the whole family but hearing other stories like yours is comforting in a strange way, so thank you. Also, I was unaware that a lot of hospice workers were volunteers. I’ll make sure to double thank them the next time I see them. It’s great to hear about people still paying it forward! Take care!

    • Hi Steph,

      I’m sorry for the hard time your family is going through. I feel you though about it being helpful but weird to hear similar stories. Towards the end with my grandma, some stuff got really bad and oddly enough it was my boss who I usually didn’t get along well with who made me feel much better by telling me a few stories about his dad’s last few days that were a little nuts. The two of us were laughing so hard at how utterly hopeless and ridiculous the entire thing was and our other co-worker was looking at us like we’d lost our minds. Sometimes even some really dark humor can help in those moments. I’m glad your family has some hospice care to step in and help!

  10. Good details of the different levels of home care. Home care services are interesting and families have to research and understand what they are looking for.

  11. It’s good to know what hospice actually entails. I like how you said that it starts with a nurse coming once or twice a week for pain management. That’s great to know because my mom may need to go on hospice soon. I’ll make sure to tell her this.

  12. Thanks for pointing out that the hospice system will take over medical care from the primary doctors and physicians once you are in their care. My grandfather was just diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer and doesn’t have a lot of time left to live. My parents are looking for a place where he can go to be taken care of while he’s still alive. Since my grandfather was a vet, my parents are also trying to find a place that will take that into consideration.

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