Hospice and palliative care allows anyone with life-limiting illnesses to
remain comfortable in familiar surroundings and fully supported by family and
medical professionals. Navigating these services for your senior loved one can
be overwhelming and tough to come to terms with, especially, if you are unsure
of which care option best fits your loved one’s situation.
With that said, our Bridges hospice team in Pitman, NJ has
compiled the similarities and differences between palliative care and hospice
to help you make the most informed and compassionate decision for your senior
family member.
What is Palliative Care?
Palliative care is a set of medical services designed to improve the
quality of life for residents with serious illnesses and their families. This
type of comprehensive care identifies, assesses, and treats symptoms, and has
the opportunity to positively influence the course of the illness at hand.
Health conditions that may benefit from palliative care include cancer and
kidney disease. Professional palliative care can make a big difference if it’s
started immediately upon diagnosis. It can also successfully manage any harmful
side effects, ensuring a better quality of life.
In palliative care, a team of nurses, therapists and other health
professionals address the needs of the resident and their family – often
offering emotional support, spiritual support, and bereavement counselling, if
needed. The palliative care team takes the time to get to know each resident’s
specific needs and concerns in order to deliver the best care possible. They
communicate often with the resident, as well as their loved ones, to ensure
they are taking the right course of action, every step of the way.
What is Hospice Care?
Hospice is a valuable resource for people of all ages, but especially
seniors and their loved ones. It provides comfort, care and support through the
final stages of life. UMC’s hospice care neighborhood, Bridges, allows families
to step back as caregivers and focus solely on spending quality time with their
loved one. Our experienced and compassionate associates actively work to reduce
hospitalizations for hospice residents, ensuring all of their needs (medical and
otherwise) are met in a more comfortable, home-like setting.
The most common reason for avoiding hospice care is that it’s a very
emotional and distressing time for senior loved ones and their families. It
represents the final chapter of your loved one’s life, and we’d much rather
focus on keeping them here. This type of care focuses on expert pain
management, physical comfort, emotional and spiritual support tailored to your
loved one’s needs and capabilities. Hospice may be difficult to accept, but the
comprehensive and compassionate care of our hospice team will ensure your loved
one is comfortable on all levels and at peace.
Hospice and palliative care in Gloucester County, NJ
UMC
at Pitman provides both palliative care and hospice services through
our specialty care neighborhood, Bridges. While both palliative and hospice
care provide comfort, these services are very different.
In our Bridges neighborhood, palliative care can begin at diagnosis, and
continue while treatment is administered to cure the disease. Hospice care, on
the other hand, begins only after a medical professional determines curative
treatment will bring no further improvement and the person is nearing their end
of life.
If you are still unsure which type of care is best for your loved one,
please give one of our senior care advisors a call today. We will take the time
to discuss different options with you, and our on-site doctors can make their
best recommendation for your senior loved one’s individual circumstances.
For more information on hospice and palliative care at UMC, visit our
website at: https://pitman.umcommunities.org/
Original blog posted on https://pitman.umcommunities.org/2021/06/07/knowing-the-difference-between-hospice-and-palliative-care/
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