Hospice care may be right for someone with Alzheimer’s
Hospice care focuses on comfort and dignity at the end of life. Rather than providing treatment, the primary purpose of hospice care is to manage pain and other symptoms. It involves care and support services that can be of great benefit to people in the final stages of Alzheimer’s disease and their families.
Hospice care focuses on comfort and dignity at the end of life; it involves care and support services that can be of great benefit to people in the final stages of Alzheimer’s and other dementias and their families.
What is hospice care?
Hospice providers with expertise in dementia can help families understand what to expect in the final stages of Alzheimer’s and provide support throughout the end-of-life process.
Hospice is a special way of caring for people who are terminally ill — and for providing support to their family. Rather than providing treatment, the primary purpose of hospice care is to manage pain and other symptoms during the last six months of life.
Hospice care is provided by a team of specially trained providers, including doctors, nurses, home health aides, social workers, counselors, clergy and volunteers. Family is often very involved in the care.
Examples of the care hospice teams provide include:
- Medical care to alleviate symptoms and pain (including medications and medical equipment)
- Counseling about the emotional and spiritual impact of the end-of-life
- Respite care to allow caregivers relief
- Grief support for the family
The majority of hospice care is provided at home or in a nursing facility. There are also some free-standing hospice facilities and hospice units within hospitals in certain parts of the country.
We Can Help
Your local Alzheimer’s Association can provide referrals to hospice care in your area.
The Hospice Foundation of America has information on how to locate a hospice, questions to ask when selecting a hospice, and resources related to hospice care and grief.
The National Hospice Foundation website offers guidance in finding and selecting a hospice program.
The National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization has a variety of free resources on topics including advance care planning, hospice and palliative care, and grief and loss.
How do you start hospice care?
5 Questions to Ask When Selecting a Hospice Provider
- Does the provider have a 24-7 call line?
- Have the workers provided hospice care to other patients with Alzheimer’s?
- How long has the agency been open?
- Does the hospice offer specialized services to improve the patient’s comfort?
- Is this hospice program Medicare certified?
To begin hospice care, an individual must have a life expectancy of six months or less. A physician’s referral is needed. If you believe your family member is in need of hospice services, communicate this to the physician currently providing care. You also can begin a self-referral process by contacting local hospice programs, which can be located at www.hospicedirectory.org.
Before hospice care begins, the hospice team meets with the referring physician as well as the family to create an individualized care plan. Once care begins, the family has 24-hour on-call access to hospice staff.
Hospice care can be stopped at any time.
How long can hospice services be received?
Hospice services are usually available for as long as they are needed. If someone receiving hospice care lives beyond six months, services are usually still covered by Medicare, Medicaid and many private insurers as long as a physician recertifies that the person is terminally ill and still meets hospice care requirements.
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Costs
Hospice is usually covered under Medicare, as well as many Medicaid and private insurance plans.
For detailed information on Hospice Medicare Benefits, download our handout (PDF).
With Medicare, there are no deductibles and only limited coinsurance payments for hospice services.
Medicare covers hospice care if:
- The person receiving care has Medicare Part A;
- The person’s physician and a hospice medical director certifies terminal illness, that is, life expectancy is six months or less, if the illness runs its normal course; and,
- The person (or person with durable power of attorney) elects to receive hospice care and waives the right for Medicare to pay for any other services to treat the terminal illness. Instead, Medicare pays the hospice and any related physician expenses. Medicare will continue to pay for any services not related to the terminal illness.
In some cases where a person does not have coverage, community donations make services possible.
http://www.optimumseniorcare.com/services/alzheimerscare.php