Hospice Voices and End-of-Life Choices: A Powerful Call for Compassion
A shift is unfolding across the United States as more states are enacting Medical Aid in Dying (MAID) laws. This legislation allows terminally ill, mentally capable adults with a prognosis of six months or less to request medication to end their lives peacefully. As...
The Role of HealthCare Workers in Shaping the Bereavement Journey
Loss is inevitable when working in end-of-life care. But the grief that follows is not simply the family’s burden alone. The way care is delivered before, at, and after the death of a loved one significantly influences whether bereavement becomes a manageable process...
What Pet Therapy Actually Means for Your Hospice Agency
The profound impact of pet therapy in end-of-life care is not just a heartwarming story; it’s a clinically supported intervention that enhances patient well-being, supports family coping, and adds a vital dimension to a hospice’s care model. For clinical and...
Care in Palliative Care: A Challenging Concept with Normative Issues
Abstract Palliative care is an approach for seriously ill patients. Illnesses and knowledge of limited life expectancy often limit self-determination among patients. Along with the concepts of patient autonomy and heteronomy, care is central to the everyday personal...
Innovation in Hospice Bereavement Programs
In recent years, hospice bereavement care has undergone significant transformation. Early programs offered traditional service delivery models relying on limited offerings, and structured and uniform service delivery format. Over time, however, researchers and...
Keeping Hands Clean: A Guide for Hospice Clinicians
Clean hands are one of the most important ways you protect your patients, yourself, and your community. Let's learn why hand hygiene is so vital and how to do it right. A Quick Look Back: Did you know that doctors didn't always understand the importance of...
See Something Say Something: Mandatory Reporting!
Hospice clinicians are mandated reporters with an individual duty to report known or suspected patient abuse. See something – say something!
Home Healthcare Workers and Violence in the Workplace
The world of hospice care is deeply personal and profoundly compassionate. As a hospice clinician, your primary focus is providing compassionate care to your patients and their families during their most vulnerable moments. But the intimate nature of home-based care...
What is a Hospice IDG Meeting and Who Should Attend
The hospice interdisciplinary group (IDG) creates a patient’s plan of care and provides holistic care to the patient, caregiver, and family. Hospice Conditions of Participation require the IDG to “review, revise, and document the individualized plan as frequent as the...
Hospice Interdisciplinary Group (Hospice IDG)
Hospice care is patient- and family-centered, where the patient's and family's preferences and needs drive the care plan. The hospice interdisciplinary group (also referred to as Hospice IDG or IDG), also referred to as the interdisciplinary team (IDT) is a team of...










