Understanding Hospice Care
Table of Contents
Understanding Hospice Care: Levels of Care, Benefits, and Common Myths
Hospice care is specialized medical care for people with a serious, life-limiting illness. The focus is on comfort, dignity, and quality of life, rather than curing the disease. Hospice also provides support for families, including emotional, social, and spiritual care.
Hospice is a Medicare-covered benefit and can be provided wherever the patient lives, including:
- Private homes
- Assisted living facilities
- Board-and-care homes
- Nursing homes
- Hospice houses
- Hospitals (when needed)
Hospice care is provided by a team, typically including nurses, aides, physicians, social workers, chaplains, and volunteers.
Importantly, hospice is designed to support patients during the last year of life, not just the last few days or weeks.
Important Benefits of Hospice
Hospice services are an important Medicare-covered tool that can get more services into the home quickly, provide payment of clinical supplies, and actually extend life—including quality of life.
Hospice provides many services that are not otherwise easily available, including:
- More frequent nurse visits than home health
- More home health aide hours
- Coverage of medical equipment (hospital bed, oxygen, wheelchair)
- Coverage of clinical supplies such as Incontinence pads, Guards, Diapers, Calmoseptine and other skin care supplies
- Medications for symptom control and comfort
- 24/7 phone access to hospice staff
- Emotional support for patients and families
- Social worker support
- Spiritual care if desired
Medicare pays for hospice nurses to visit patients in the home more frequently than home health, which is a major factor in catching and treating infections early that would otherwise cause discomfort or death.
This additional support helps prevent crises, improves comfort, and helps patients remain at home.
The Four Levels of Hospice Care
Hospice care has four different levels, depending on the patient’s needs. Patients can move between these levels as their condition changes.
1. Routine Home Care (Most Common Level)
What it is:
This is the most common level of hospice care. Services are provided wherever the patient calls home.
What’s included:
- Regular visits by hospice nurses, aides, social workers, chaplains, and volunteers
- Nurse visits may be weekly, or more frequent if needed
- Medications for symptom control and pain relief
- Medical equipment and supplies (hospital bed, oxygen, wheelchair, etc.)
- Supplies such as incontinence pads, guards, diapers, and Calmoseptine
- 24/7 on-call support
Hospice will also cover more hours of home health aides in the home than home health will.
Who it’s for:
Patients who need symptom management and support but do not require continuous monitoring.
How much in-home support does a client receive when on hospice?
The Medicare Hospice Benefit does not specify the amount of provision of aide/ADL support. Many hospices provide 1-2h, 1-2x/week, but it's at the organization’s discretion and (theoretically) tailored to the needs of the patient/family.
So the 2 home based frameworks family can choose from for someone with advanced stage dementia:
-
GUIDE + home health: 76 hours of in-home respite/year respite hours paid for by Medicare at no cost to patient/family, utilization at the discretion of the family. generally limited to 4 hour blocks at a time. full range of homecare services that includes meal prep, transportation (there may be variation by homecare agency)
-
Hospice: 52 - 208 hours of in-home respite/year if given weekly. respite is offered at the discretion of the hospice agency. generally limited to a 1-2hours/1-2x/week. narrow range of services (bathing, changing).
Under the Medicare Hospice Benefit there is no cost to the patient/family. Families get an average of 20 visits/month by a member of the interdisciplinary team (all services, not just respite. includes nurse, social worker, chaplain, aide, etc).
2. Continuous Home Care (CHC)
What it is:
Short-term, intensive nursing care provided at home during a medical crisis.
What’s included:
- Continuous care for at least 8 hours in a 24-hour period (may be up to 24/7)
- At least half of care is provided by a nurse
- Focus on controlling acute symptoms such as severe pain, breathing problems, or agitation
Who it’s for:
Patients experiencing a medical crisis who wish to remain at home instead of going to the hospital.
3. Inpatient Respite Care
What it is:
Temporary inpatient care to give the primary caregiver a break.
What’s included:
- Care in a hospital, hospice house, or nursing facility
- Up to 5 consecutive days covered at a time
- 24-hour nursing care
- All hospice services provided during the stay
Who it’s for:
Patients whose caregivers need rest or time to attend to personal matters.
4. General Inpatient Care (GIP)
What it is:
Short-term inpatient care for symptom management that cannot be provided at home.
What’s included:
- 24-hour nursing and medical care
- Medications and therapies to control severe symptoms such as:
- Uncontrolled pain
- Severe vomiting
- Seizures
- Extreme anxiety
- Other acute symptoms
Who it’s for:
Patients with acute symptoms that cannot be managed in any other setting.
Common Hospice Myths and Facts
Myth #1: Hospice is only for cancer patients at the very end of life
Fact:
It is common that hospice is associated in the general public as a service for just those with cancer at the very end of life. This is not true. Hospice is a service for those with many other conditions including severe dementia, and is meant for more than just the last few weeks of life.
Hospice is intended to support individuals during the last year of life, but it is often started too late. Most people are on hospice for only about 2 weeks before passing, which is much shorter than intended.
Myth #2: Hospice can shorten life
Fact:
If hospice is started much sooner than what typically happens, it can actually help extend life and improve quality of life for both the person and their family.
This is because hospice provides:
- More frequent nurse visits than home health
- Earlier detection and treatment of infections
- Better symptom management
- Spiritual and social work support
- More services supporting families
If someone starts hospice early enough, they may improve so much that they are no longer eligible for hospice and are discharged from the program. This is completely okay. Patients can:
- Be discharged if they improve
- Re-enroll later when things decline
- Move on and off hospice multiple times if appropriate
Some patients live much longer than expected—even years—with hospice support.
Myth #3: I have to stop all my medications to be on hospice
Fact:
This is not true. All medications can be continued if the family so chooses.
There may be discussions around simplifying medications, which often makes sense for the overall clinical picture, if this has not already been done by the primary care provider or care team. These decisions are always made together with the patient, family, and care team.
Myth #4: Hospice is a permanent decision
Fact:
Hospice is always a choice.
Families can consult with hospice first to learn more. They are not obligated to enroll.
Patients and families can:
- Ask questions
- Meet with hospice for information only
- Decline hospice
- Stop hospice at any time
- Restart hospice later if appropriate
If the family member has questions or concerns, they should escalate them to the care team to make sure they are not based on myths.
Why Starting Hospice Earlier Can Help
Starting hospice earlier provides important benefits:
- Better symptom control
- Earlier treatment of infections and complications
- Less need for hospital visits
- More support for caregivers
- Improved quality of life
- Sometimes longer survival
- Hospice nurses visit more frequently than home health nurses, which helps identify and treat problems early.
Take-Home Message
Hospice is an important Medicare-covered service that:
- Provides comfort-focused care in the home
- Supports both patients and families
- Covers medical equipment and clinical supplies, including incontinence supplies
- Provides more hands-on support than home health
- Helps prevent crises
- Improves quality of life
- Can sometimes help patients live longer
Hospice is not about giving up. It is about providing the right support at the right time.