March 29, 2012

Hospice Use Contines to Rise Nationwide

A new study, published by Harden Hospice, confirms that the use of hospice in the United States continues to rise.

"The findings in this report support what we see every day," Lew Little, chief executive officer of Harden Healthcare, said. "An increasing number of patients and their families are realizing the unique blend of clinical, social and spiritual support services that hospice care provides. Hospice services allow them to focus on spending quality time with friends and family rather than on care-giving details during this difficult time. Hospice is also there to support the family after the loss of a loved one."
The statistical finds of the report reveal the nature of the growth of hospice care:


  • Almost 42 percent of all deaths in the United States took place under hospice care in 2010.

  • An estimated 1.58 million patients received hospice services in 2010.

  • The median time people spent in hospice care before dying was about 20 days.

  • Sixty-six percent of hospice patients died in their homes; 42 percent in a private residence other than their own homes; 21 percent in a "hospice house" and 18 percent in nursing homes.

  • Hospice patients died mostly of cancer (35.6 percent), followed by heart disease (14.3 percent).

  • The first hospice program in the United States opened in 1974, and currently, there are more than 5,000 programs nationwide.

  • The Medicare hospice benefit, enacted by Congress in 1982, is the major source of funding for hospice care.

  • Hospice provides an invaluable service to terminal patients and their families. If you have questions about Blues Skies Hospice please call (219) 554-0688.
     

    March 22, 2012

    Blue Skies Volunteer Julie Hancin Wins Volunteer Award

    On March 22, 2012 the City of Hammond held a banquet for community volunteers and social service providers. Blues Skies Hospice volunteer Julie Hancin was one of four recipients of the prestigious Individual Adult Volunteer Award. The entire Blues Skies staff attended the ceremony to congratulate Julie. Ms. Hancin began volunteering with Blue Skies in 2007, and has brought her care, compassion, and commitment to excellence to the patients and families of Blue Skies with a selfless dedication to service. She represents the purpose, mission, and meaning of Blue Skies Hopsice.

    Volunteer Coordinator Pearl Masciotra (left) and Julie Hancin (right) at the Banquet


    Julie Hancin with the other award winners


    The Blue Skies Hospice Staff

    March 12, 2012

    Blues Skies Hospice Participates in St. Catherine Hospital Heart Health Fair

    On February 25, 2012, Blue Skies Hospice volunteer coordinator Pearl Masciotra held a booth at the St. Catherine Hospital Heart Health Fair for the second annual year. Pearl enjoyed speaking with community professionals and residents about the wonderful services offered at Blue Skies, along with the vast volunteer opportunities.

    Pictured below is Pearl Masciotra (left) with Helene Zukanovich (right), who is a registered nurse and leads the Heart Failure Treatment Department at St. Catherine Hospital.

    March 11, 2012

    Learning to Live with "Dying Well"

    Hospice and Palliative Care is, unfortunately and in some cases tragically, considered controversial. Misinformed critics accuse hospice of ending life, when in reality, palliative care treats pain for terminal patients, while hospice enables those patients to die peacefully, comfortably, and with dignity. The families of the patients also benefit from palliative care and treatment, because it help their healing begin. Blue Skies Hospice works with terminally ill patients, and uses its dedicated staff of nurses, social workers, clergy, doctors, and volunteers, to respect the wishes of dying patients, and bring love and companionship to them and their families.

    Dr. Ira Brock, interviewed by USA Today, dispels some of the myths about hospice and describes its importance, along with its medical, psychological, and spiritual benefits. Dr. Karen Wyatt also weighs in to advocate for more palliative care and hospice:





    Medical advances help people live longer and longer, but too few physicians help people understand that longer is not always better, according to two new books.

    Dr. Ira Byock MD counsels patient David Plant and wife Bette Jean Plant. Most doctors have been trained to treat diseases and not deal with end-of-life issues, according to Byock.

    Ira Byock says he wants "to raise people's expectations" about the end of life and to to change the conversation about dying in America about dying.

    "It's not easy to die well in modern times," says Byock, director of palliative medicine at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, N.H., and author of The Best Care Possible, a Physician's Quest to Transform Care Through the End Of Life.

    Karen Wyatt, physician and author of What Really Matters, 7 Lessons for Living from the Stories of the Dying, describes a "horrifying night" she experienced as a resident at a hospital.

    "A man came into the hospital and his heart arrested fives times in the course of the night," she says. "We resuscitated him four times before he finally died with us pounding on his chest. It was so sad, and what makes me so passionate about hospice care, where people can die very comfortably at home with their loved ones around them."

    Byock says the needless suffering at the end of life is partly a result of a current political climate that accuses palliative care doctors and hospice physicians of promoting a "culture of death" or "death panels." Rather, he writes, he is one of the compassionate experts who are "pro-life" and insist people get the best care possible — basically what they want for themselves — and no extra care.

    "Most doctors have been trained to treat diseases and not deal with end-of-life issues," he says. "American medical prowess is wonderful, but we have yet to make a person immortal. At some point, more disease treatment is not better care."

    People have to think about quality of life but also quality of death, he says, adding that it's important that doctors don't give up too soon on someone while also knowing the limitations of treatment.

    "I think physicians have really fallen short on that obligation," says Wyatt. "They haven't been as helpful to patients as they could have been."

    Byock writes that throughout the ages people have held common fundamental values: to live as long and as well as possible, and eventually, to die gently. In his book, he shares poignant, complex conversations he has had with families and patients about knowing when to say "enough is enough," and letting health care professionals help keep a dying person comfortable with medications.

    Additionally, he calls for changes in how doctors are educated (most medical schools do not require hospice or palliative care rotations, he notes) and changes in letting patients guide their own care at the end of life — Medicare and Medicaid, for instance, don't allow older people to have hospice care until they drop medical treatments.

    Wyatt says her goals are to help people learn how to live and to face death. She offers spiritual lessons she learned while director of a hospice program in Ogden, Utah, from 1992 to 1999. One lesson centers on impermanence.

    "Everything around us is going to have an end," she says. "Once we know that, as the dying person does, we savor life more, instead of focusing on what will happen down the road. It can be such a peaceful, beautiful passing."


    March 7, 2012

    Listen to Blues Skies Director, Lisa Guzman, Live On The Radio

    Blues Skies Director Lisa Guzman and Karen Lansdowne, RN at Blues Skies, will speak with Jed of Jed in the Morning on WJOB 1230 AM at 7:00 am on Thursday, March 8th. Jed, Lisa, and Karen will discuss the services that Blues Skies offers the community. The conversation will likely be informative and helpful to those seeking knowledge about Blue Skies and hospice in general.

    You can also listen and watch the broadcast at the official website for WJOB.