November 9, 2025 · 3 min read

The New England Journal of Medicine recently published a Perspective titled “What Is Hospice?” – a piece that captures, in striking detail, what hospice truly means beyond the policies, programs, and checklists that are so often discussed in healthcare.
It begins with a familiar question from a patient: “What is hospice?” The physician’s answer is the one that is often received: hospice is a service for people with less than six months to live who choose comfort over cure. It provides care through a team of doctors, nurses, social workers, and counselors who guide patients and families through the final stage of life.
But as the Perspective unfolds, the author takes the reader deeper – into the emotional terrain that families, clinicians, and patients navigate together. Hospice, the physician reflects, isn’t just medical care. It is the quiet moments at home, the scent of a familiar meal, the sound of family laughter between tears. It’s the deep breath before goodbye.
The piece reminds us that hospice is not surrender. Rather, it is transformation. It shifts the focus from fighting disease to embracing the life that remains.
“Hospice is always sad; if all goes well, painless; and sometimes, heartbreakingly beautiful.”
That sentence, near the end of the essay, lingers long after you finish reading. Because it’s true. Hospice is complex and sacred. It’s where love and loss coexist. Where families learn that letting go can be an act of care.
For those who work in hospice, the author’s story feels achingly familiar. These are every day scenes: The bag of medications on the kitchen counter. The photo albums on the table. The phone calls to distant family members. The dog who refuses to leave the bedside.
These moments aren’t clinical data points. They are the essence of hospice care. They remind us that hospice happens not only in facilities or inpatient units but also in living rooms, bedrooms, and hearts.
And yet, even professionals sometimes struggle to explain hospice in a way that captures its full truth. This Perspective does what definitions cannot. It shows hospice as both a medical philosophy and a deeply human experience.
This piece invites all of us – hospice professionals, caregivers, and community members – to pause and reflect:
These are not easy questions but they are the ones that guide the sacred work of hospice professionals.
The New England Journal of Medicine Perspective is a beautiful reminder that hospice is not a destination; it’s a journey of presence, compassion, and understanding. It’s the place where medicine meets meaning.
Hospice workers are not just managing symptoms. Hospice workers are helping people find comfort, connection, and peace when life is at its most fragile.
Hospice, in the author’s words, is “safe harbor after an arduous journey.” Perhaps, that’s the best definition of all.