Hospice in a sentence as a noun

Nothing as extreme or taxing as hospice care, but also not a cake walk.

When you're in hospice care, you're looking at a remaining life measured in days or weeks.

"It's probably time to call hospice, not the "We can beat this oncologist.

The study found that families of those who went into hospice coped better with the loss.

My mother is a hospice nurse and it has given me a viewpoint I don't think I would have ever considered before.

My best friend was just put into hospice for metastasized melanoma.

I'm not sure what connotations you were going for with the word "hospice", but I'd really suggest choosing a different name.

The graphical imagery conveyed by hospice I/O is tragic and sad.

Ask anyone who has worked in long term or hospice care this question and you will likely find an overwhelming majority choosing option 1.

I happen to have visited her hospice in Calcutta and was shocked to see its condition given the significant amount of donations being sent.

Furthermore, almost counterintuitively, those in hospice care actually lived longer on average.

"Home care agencies abruptly dropped or refused high-needs cases like her father’s as unprofitable"This story is really, really glossing over what is happening in home health hospice as a whole.

For profit hospice organizations are crippling the non profit organizations by taking all the cheap and easy patients offering them slightly better services than the non profits, while dumping all the expensive and unprofitable patients on the non profits who typically try to take every patient regardless of their ability to pay, regardless of Medicaid and Medicare.

Hospice definitions

noun

a lodging for travelers (especially one kept by a monastic order)

noun

a program of medical and emotional care for the terminally ill