Alzheimer's Awareness Month: How Hospice Care Can Provide Support

Alzheimer’s Disease is a progressive neurological condition that affects memory, thinking, and behavior. Over time, it significantly impacts an individual’s ability to manage daily life, leading families to seek additional support and care options. One important resource for families is hospice care, which provides comfort, dignity, and support for patients and their loved ones during the final stages of illness.
When Does Hospice Become an Option?
Hospice eligibility for Alzheimer’s Disease is based on the progression of the disease rather than a specific timeframe. The key indicator is when the individual is in the advanced stages of dementia and the focus shifts from curative treatment to comfort and quality of life. Medicare and most insurance providers use certain clinical guidelines to determine eligibility, which include:
- Inability to perform two or more daily activities without significant assistance such as eating, dressing, bathing, toileting, or walking.
- Limited verbal communication, often only a few words or phrases.
- Difficulty swallowing or frequent infections such as pneumonia or urinary tract infections.
- Unintentional weight loss or malnutrition despite support.
- Declining overall health, including multiple hospitalizations or frequent emergency room visits.
Why Hospice Matters
For families caring for someone with Alzheimer’s Disease, the journey can be long and emotionally overwhelming. Hospice provides a holistic approach to care that supports both the patient and the family. This includes:
- Hospice CNA: who helps patient with bathing, incontinence care, changing clothes, changing bed linens, and oral care which is often difficult for family to provide.
- Expert medical care: Symptom management, pain control, and close monitoring of changes along with education provided by hospice physicians, nurse practitioners, nurses, and CNAs on the changes that occur within the journey of the illness of Alzheimer’s Disease.
- Emotional and spiritual support: Counseling and guidance for patients and loved ones provided by hospice chaplains and social workers.
- Navigation of financial resources for various needs in caregiving and arrangements: Provided by hospice social worker
- Respite for caregivers: Relief through short-term inpatient care and volunteer support.
- Grief support: Continued assistance for families before and after a loved one’s passing provided by hospice chaplains or bereavement counselors.
Friends of Caroline’s Commitment
At Friends of Caroline, we recognize that every journey with Alzheimer’s Disease is unique. Our hospice team partners with families to ensure compassionate, individualized care. Whether in the home, our inpatient facility, nursing facilities, assisted living facilities, or through our grief support services, we honor the dignity of each patient while providing comfort and peace for their families.
If you are caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s Disease and are unsure if hospice is appropriate, we encourage you to reach out. Our team can provide guidance, answer questions, and help you understand the options available.
Since 1977, Friends of Caroline has been committed to serving our community with palliative, hospice, and grief support services. No one is ever turned away due to inability to pay.












