Hospice at Home vs. Hospice Facility
Should your loved one receive hospice care at home or in a hospice facility? Understanding the differences helps families make the right end-of-life decision.
Most people prefer to die at home — and hospice makes that possible for many families. But home-based hospice places significant demands on family caregivers, and not all medical situations are manageable at home. Residential hospice facilities offer an alternative when home is no longer feasible. Here’s how to evaluate which setting fits your situation.
Honor the preference — but be honest about capacity
Home hospice is the right choice when the patient wants it, the family can manage the caregiving demands, and symptoms are reasonably controlled. Family caregiver willingness and capacity is the determining factor — not just patient preference. When a family caregiver is exhausted, ill, or simply unable to provide the physical care needed, a hospice facility isn’t giving up — it’s recognizing reality and ensuring a comfortable, dignified death. Some families use home hospice for most of the journey and transfer to a hospice facility in the final days when symptoms become unmanageable.
Questions Families Ask About This Decision
Medicare Part A covers inpatient hospice under two circumstances: General Inpatient Care (GIP) for uncontrolled symptoms requiring intensive management, and Respite Care (up to 5 days to relieve caregivers). Routine residential hospice facility stays are generally paid by the patient/family or through long-term care insurance.
Yes. A person’s current residence — whether that’s a house, assisted living, or memory care — is their “home” for hospice purposes. Hospice agencies can provide services in any residential setting, including nursing facilities.
Under Medicare, home hospice includes RN visits (typically weekly to several times/week), home health aide services, social worker visits, chaplain/spiritual care, medications related to the terminal diagnosis, equipment (hospital bed, wheelchair), and 24/7 phone access to a nurse.
Texas has several freestanding hospice houses as well as hospice-designated wings in nursing facilities and hospitals. Your hospice agency can help identify inpatient options. In Houston, VITAS, Amedisys, and Compassus are major providers; Austin has Hospice Austin’s Palliative Care Center.
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