hospice

     

Palliative care (from Latin palliare, to cloak) is any form of meical care or treatment that concentrates on reducing the severity of disease symptoms, rather than halting or delaying progression of the disease itself or providing a cure. The goal is to prevent and relieve suffering and to improve quality of life for people facing serious, complex illness. Non-hospice palliative care is not dependent on prognosis and is offered in conjunction with curative and all other appropriate forms of medical treatment. It should not be confused with hospice care which delivers palliative care to those at the end of life. In the UK this distinction is not operative; hospices and non-hospice-based palliative care teams both provide care to those with life limiting illness at any stage of their disease.

Trivia about hospice

  • In 1967 Dame Cicely Saunders founded St. Christopher's, the first modern one of these; in 2005 she died there
  • A house of shelter for pilgrims, or a homelike facility that provides care for the terminally ill