Jimmy Carter not dead SEVEN months after entering hospice, attends event 🤔
(www.dailymail.co.uk)
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Not saying Jimmy Carter is still alive, but many people live for years after hospice admission. They only need to be discharged if their health improves, which does happen sometimes.
Hospice is where you go to die. People are already almost dead when they go there. People rarely last more than a few hours or a couple days when they are moved to hospice. Hospice is tasked with keeping them comfortable while providing no extra efforts to keep the patient alive. Everyone there is Do Not Resuscitate. You do not live for years in hospice, that is what nursing homes are for. If you get to near death in a nursing home they move you to hospice.
This is the definition of hospice:
I have recent experience with hospice care and nursing homes.
Nope. I've worked in hospice for several years. To be admitted to hospice care, the patient must have a terminal diagnosis with a 6-month prognosis, which means that the patient would be expected to die within 6 months if the illness takes a textbook progression. Since illness doesn't care about textbook progression, most patients do survive more than 6 months.
To remain in hospice care, the patient's condition cannot improve. They are not required to be DNRs and they can go to the ED for conditions that cannot be managed in the home, such as falls or injuries. If they are admitted to the hospital, they must be discharged from hospice until they return home.
The hospice care model is for the patient to remain at home with the family taking care of them. Hospice agency nurses, personal care aides, social workers, and chaplains visit the home regularly and frequently to assist the family. Any hospice patients in facilities usually don't have family members who are capable of taking care of them at home.