
The Hospice Medicare Benefits Hospice care is a special way of caring for a patient whose disease cannot be cured. It is available as a benefit under Medicare Part A. Medicare beneficiaries who choose hospice care receive non-curative medical and support services for their terminal illness.
To be eligible, they must be certified by a physician to be terminally ill with a life expectancy of six months or less. While they no longer receive treatment toward a cure, they require close medical and supportive care which a hospice can provide. Hospice care under Medicare includes both home care and inpatient care, when needed, and a variety of services not otherwise covered by Medicare. The focus is on care, not cure. Emphasis is on helping the person to make the most of each hour and each day of remaining life by providing comfort and relief from pain.
For more information about Medicare health plans or to receive a Medicare handbook, call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227).
What does the Hospice Benefit Cover?
Respond to our patients' and families' needs
Treat every patient and family member with respect
Acknowledge and embrace religious, ethnic and cultural diversity
Provide the highest quality service
Affirm patient self-determination, empowerment and choice
Encourage staff's professional and personal development
Hospice care compared to medical treatment
Primary focus
Patient’s quality of life: physical, emotional, spiritual
Patient’s physical illness
Attitude towards death
Natural part of life
Not responsive to medical treatment
Physical care
Palliative care: seeks to relieve pain and physical discomfort, neither prolongs life nor hastens death
Curative care: seeks to prolong life, intensive care can involve pain and physical discomfort
Emotional and spiritual support
Part of hospice care
Supplementary to physical treatment
Place of Care
Usually in the home; also can be in nursing facilities or assisted living settings.
Usually hospitals or clinics
Family and friends involvement with patient
Integral to hospice care
Secondary to treatment
Support for family and friends
Integral to hospice care
Secondary to treatment
After death
Bereavement care offered to family and friends for over a year
Death concludes treatment