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Hospice Care vs. Palliative Care: What Westchester Families Need to Know

Hospice Care vs. Palliative Care: What Westchester Families Need to Know

When someone you love is facing a serious illness, the amount of information coming at you can feel like too much all at once. You may have heard the words hospice or palliative care and wondered whether they mean the same thing, or which one applies to your family right now.

Both hospice and palliative care exist for the same reason: to make sure that people living with serious illness are surrounded by comfort, dignity, and genuine human support. Both involve teams of dedicated professionals who care for the whole person, not just the medical side of things.

Westchester HospiceThe difference, at its heart, comes down to timing. According to the National Institute on Aging, palliative care can start as early as a person’s diagnosis and can be offered alongside treatments aimed at curing or slowing the progression of a disease. Hospice care, on the other hand, is for a person whose doctor has determined that if the illness runs its natural course, life expectancy is six months or less. One can begin at any point in a serious illness. The other is a deeply supportive form of care for the final chapter of life.

What Palliative Care in Westchester County Looks Like

Palliative care Westchester County families can access is not something you have to wait for. It is available from the moment a serious diagnosis arrives, and it works hand in hand with whatever other treatment your loved one is already receiving. According to the National Institute on Aging, palliative care is a resource for anyone living with a serious illness such as heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cancer, dementia, or Parkinson’s disease.

Think of palliative care as a layer of support that sits alongside everything else. It helps manage pain and difficult symptoms. It helps your family understand what is happening and what choices you have. It makes space for the emotional and spiritual side of a serious illness that so often gets overlooked in the rush of appointments and treatments. After 35 years of walking alongside Westchester families, we have seen how much of a difference this kind of support can make, not just for the person who is ill, but for everyone who loves them.

The 5 Stages of Palliative Care

Families often ask us about the 5 stages of palliative care and what they can expect as time goes on. While palliative care does not follow a rigid path, it does tend to move through a natural progression that mirrors the journey of a serious illness. According to VITAS Healthcare, palliative care can begin at any stage of illness at the discretion of the physician and patient, and it evolves as needs change. In general, that progression looks something like this:

  1. During active treatment, palliative care focuses on managing side effects and keeping your loved one as comfortable as possible while curative treatment is underway.
  2. As an illness becomes more chronic, palliative care shifts toward helping your loved one live as fully as possible day to day.
  3. In the advanced illness phase, comfort and quality of life become the central focus and conversations about goals of care become more important.
  4. As end of life approaches, palliative care gently supports the transition toward hospice and helps families feel prepared rather than blindsided.
  5. After a loss, palliative care extends into bereavement support, helping the people left behind find their footing again.

Knowing where your family is in this journey can help you ask the right questions and make sure you are getting the right level of support at each step.

The Philosophy of Hospice Care

At its core, the philosophy of hospice care is about one thing: making sure that the end of life is as peaceful, comfortable, and meaningful as possible. According to the Hospice Foundation of America, hospice care aims to manage a patient’s symptoms while supporting their quality of life, and it provides support for family caregivers as well as the patient.

Long Term Hospice Care in Westchester

Hospice and Palliative CareLong term hospice care that Westchester families can access often begins weeks or even months before the end of life, and that time makes an enormous difference.

According to Medicare.gov, Medicare covers hospice care for patients certified by a physician to have a life expectancy of six months or less, and care can continue for as long as the patient continues to meet that criteria. Hospice long term care is not a countdown. It is an ongoing, evolving relationship between your family and a team of people who are fully committed to being there for you. At Jansen, our hospice care services are provided wherever your loved one calls home, whether that is a private residence, a skilled nursing or assisted living facility, or a NewYork-Presbyterian contracted hospital.

How the Two Types of Care Work Together

It helps to picture palliative care and hospice care as two points on the same path rather than two separate roads. According to the Hospice Foundation of America, all hospice care is palliative in nature because the focus is always on comfort and symptom management, but not all palliative care is hospice. Palliative care is the broader journey. Hospice is a deeply supported, fully focused chapter within it.

And as CaringInfo, a program of the National Alliance for Care at Home, reminds us, if your loved one’s needs change, the kind of care they receive can change too. There is no single right moment to make these decisions, and you do not have to have everything figured out before you reach out.

Key Takeaways

  • According to the National Institute on Aging, palliative care can begin at diagnosis and works alongside curative treatment, while hospice care is for those with a life expectancy of six months or less.
  • The 5 stages of palliative care move naturally from active treatment through chronic illness management, advanced illness, transition to end of life, and bereavement support.
  • The philosophy of hospice care centers on dignity, comfort, and quality of life, not giving up.
  • According to Medicare.gov, hospice care is covered 100 percent by Medicare and Medicaid for eligible patients and includes medications and medical equipment.
  • Long term hospice care Westchester families can access often begins months before the end of life and continues for as long as the patient meets eligibility criteria.
  • According to CaringInfo, the type of care a loved one receives can always evolve as their needs change.

Frequently Asked Questions

When should a family consider hospice care?

A family should consider hospice care when curative treatment is no longer helping or when the patient has chosen to prioritize comfort and quality of life over continued treatment. According to the National Institute on Aging, starting hospice early can provide months of meaningful care and quality time with loved ones, and many families wish they had reached out sooner.

Can someone receive palliative care and still pursue curative treatment?

Yes, absolutely. According to VITAS Healthcare, palliative care can begin at any stage of illness and does not require a patient to stop pursuing curative treatment. It is designed to work alongside whatever is already in place.

What is the philosophy of hospice care?

The philosophy of hospice care is that every person deserves to spend the end of their life with dignity, comfort, and peace. According to the Hospice Foundation of America, hospice care focuses on managing symptoms and supporting quality of life for both the patient and their family caregivers.

How long can someone receive hospice care?

Hospice care can last for weeks or months. According to Medicare.gov, care continues for as long as the patient continues to meet eligibility criteria and a physician certifies that the illness, if it runs its natural course, would result in a life expectancy of six months or less.

Jansen Hospice Is Whenever You Are Ready

Our team at Jansen Hospice has been walking alongside Westchester families through some of the hardest and most tender moments of their lives for over 35 years. We offer both palliative care support and hospice care throughout Westchester, along with integrative therapies including music therapy, acupuncture, aromatherapy, art therapy, massage therapy, pet therapy, reflexology, Reiki, and therapeutic touch.

Sources

Jansen made an unbearable experience somewhat bearable. My wife of 52 years went into hospice at home on August 4 and died on August 29 from metastatic breast cancer. The moment we agreed with the doctors to end chemo and move to hospice, Jansen took over. Social Worker Deb Hanley organized everything. Nurse Marcia Roberts was available at all times and made sure that we had all the necessary medicines and equipment before we knew that we needed them. The aides who came to our home every day were all both kind and competent. I had never heard of Jansen before the staff at Lawrence Hospital introduced us. I do not know how to say thank you any better than writing this 5-star review.

— William