Healthcare Professionals
Hospice care is often available much earlier than people realize. When curative treatment is no longer available, hospice can be a tremendous source of emotional and physical support for patients and their families. Quality of life becomes the focus with symptom control, pain management, and support for navigating social, emotional, and spiritual transitions.
Hospice neither hastens nor prolongs the natural disease process. In fact, participation in hospice has been shown to lengthen life expectancy in some patients. Pain and symptom management, hospitalization rates, and patient/family satisfaction improve when patients receive hospice interdisciplinary care.
Talking with your patients about end-of-life goals
Meaningful conversations between providers and their patients about appropriate care choices can lead to better outcomes. Evidence-based medicine is more than just using clinically proven procedures: it is equally important to decide what not to do.
When having a dialogue with patients about their care goals when they have a terminal illness, it is helpful to have criteria about hospice guidelines to augment your clinical judgment.
The resources below offer some helpful tips and descriptions about the benchmarks commonly used when determining eligibility for hospice. Informational visits are available for your patients and can take place at home or in a hospital setting.
Guidelines for Admission
Download the full Guidelines for Hospice Admission
Download a PDF for each diagnosis by clicking each link:
Additional Resources
Visit online resources by following the external links below:
- National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization
- The Conversation Project
- Palliative Doctors
- Vital Talk
- Fast Facts
- DPOA from Washington State Medical Association
- Honoring Choices Pacific Northwest
- POLST
- Five Wishes
Download these PDF resources by clicking the links:
- Basic ADLs and IADLs
- Dementia Frailty Screen
- FAST Score for Dementia
- FAST Score Ranking
- NY Heart Association Functional Classification
If you have any questions on how Hospice of the Northwest can help you or your patients, please call us at (360) 814-5550 to speak with one of our Hospice Physicians or fill out the email form to the right.
Palliative Pearls
Say What?
January 2022 - Hearing impairment can look like dementia or depression, and makes both of those worse. SuperEar® is a personal sound amplifier (for...
A Thank You
December 2021 - A Thank You A poem, as we enter the darker days of winter, holding the suffering of so many. Blessed are you who bear the light in...
Communication Tip: Address the emotion you see
November 2021 - Palliative Pearl - Communication Tip: Address the emotions you see “May I ask what’s going through your mind?” When we notice strong...