Hospice Boise ID

A hospice is a place of refuge in a comfortable setting with concerned caregivers where the dying can live out their last days with pain management in peace. Hospice care may be given at home or in a private or public facility. Usually terminally ill patients, dying seniors and people suffering the last stages of AIDS or cancer require hospice care. Please scroll down to learn more and get access to all the related resources and services in Boise, ID listed below.

Four Rivers Hospice
(208)367-7343
427 N Curtis Rd
Boise, ID
St Lukes RMC Hospice
(208)381-2721
325 W Idaho St
Boise, ID
St. Luke's Reg. Medical Ctr - Home Care & Hospice
208-381-3946
190 East Bannock Street
Boise, ID
St. Luke's Reg. Medical Ctr - Home Care & Hospice
208-381-3946
190 East Bannock Street
Boise, ID
Applewood Assisted Living
208-377-1656
779 S Tennyson Way
Boise, Id
Lifes Doors Hospice
(208)344-6500
420 S Orchard St
Boise, ID
Care First Hospice
(208)343-1200
1655 W Fairview Ave Ste 204
Boise, ID
St. Luke's Hospice
208-381-2721
100 East Idaho
Boise, ID
St. Luke's Hospice
208-381-2721
100 East Idaho
Boise, ID
At Home Care Consulting
800-649-5515
8555 W Hackamore Dr Ste 150
Boise, ID
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Hospice

Hospice Benefit – Levels of Care

written by Staci Warsaw |

Levels of Care

Let’s talk about a thing called “levels of care”. The hospice benefit has four of them.

I will start by saying that each of these levels of care is guided by the same principle; pain and symptom management. That is the ultimate goal of the hospice program; to ensure people die with dignity and comfortable. Each level is managed in some way, shape or form by the hospice team ; with the hospice nurse being in the middle and ensuring the needs of the patient and their family members are met. The hospice team consists of the nurse, physician, social worker, chaplain, home health aide and volunteers.

Routine care: This is the most common level of care utilized by patients. It consists of intermittent visits by the hospice team provided wherever a person lives. This level of care is for a patient who is in the terminal phase of their illness, but whose symptoms are well managed. It is the level used the vast majority of the time. The patient must have a primary caregiver or caregivers available to help meet his or her needs at any time. Patients are seen a few times a week on average, by the hospice team . This is modified as the patients needs change, and according to patient and family wishes.

Inpatient care: This level of care is available for the patient in crisis with exacerbation of pain or symptoms related to their terminal illness. Pain, bleeding, respiratory and cardiac events are some examples of when inpatient care is needed. This level of care must take place in a facility that has Registered Nurses 24/7. That means a hospital and many nursing homes. This level of care is usually short-term; lasting a few days to a week. Once the crisis is resolved, the patient returns to their home.

Continuous Care : The requirements to receive continuous care are exactly the same as those for inpatient care. The patient must be in crisis, with unmanaged symptoms or pain. The difference is the hospice staff increases their in- home care to 24 hours a day until the crisis has past. If a patient needs continuous care , a certain percentage of the care MUST be given by a nurse. This level is also usually very short-term; lasting a day or two at most the vast majority of the time.

Respite Care: This is the level of care that is used to manage caregiver breakdown. Any of you who have cared for a loved one through illness know that it is taxing on mind and body. Caregivers sometime...

Click here to read the rest of the article from Boomer-Living.com

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