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Understanding Hospice Care: Everything Families Need to Know

April 6, 2026 by AlevCare Hospice

Hospice care is a Medicare-covered benefit that provides comfort-focused medical care, emotional support, and practical help for people with a terminal illness and a prognosis of six months or less. It is not about giving up. It is about choosing quality of life, managing pain and symptoms at home, and making sure your family has support, not just your loved one. 

This guide covers what hospice care is, who qualifies, what services are included, and how to know when it may be time to consider it.

What Is Hospice Care?

Hospice care is a specialized type of medical care focused on comfort rather than cure. It is for people who have a serious, life-limiting illness where continued curative treatment is either no longer working, no longer desired, or is causing more burden than benefit.

The goal shifts from fighting the disease to managing symptoms, protecting dignity, and supporting the entire family through one of life’s most difficult chapters.

According to Medicare, hospice care is appropriate when a physician certifies that a patient has a life expectancy of six months or less if the illness follows its natural course. Importantly, that six-month threshold is not a hard deadline. Patients can remain in hospice as long as they continue to meet eligibility criteria, and they can choose to leave hospice and return to curative treatment at any time.

Hospice is not a place. It is a coordinated program of care that comes to where your loved one already is, whether that is home, an assisted living community, or another home-like setting.

What Hospice Care Is Not

Families often delay calling hospice because of misunderstandings about what it means. These are the most common ones worth setting aside.

  • Hospice is not giving up. Choosing comfort-focused care is a deeply considered, often courageous decision. It reflects a commitment to your loved one’s quality of life, not an abandonment of it.
  • Hospice does not mean death is imminent. Many patients stabilize under hospice care and live longer, and with better quality of life, than they might have otherwise. Early enrollment often means more time with symptoms managed well.
  • Hospice does not end your relationship with your physician. Your loved one’s attending physician remains involved in the care plan. The hospice team works alongside them.
  • Hospice is not just for cancer patients. It serves people with heart failure, COPD, dementia, kidney disease, ALS, Parkinson’s, and many other serious illnesses.

Who Qualifies for Hospice Care?

To qualify for the Medicare Hospice Benefit, a patient must meet three criteria:

  1. Be enrolled in Medicare Part A
  2. Have a terminal diagnosis with a prognosis of six months or less, as certified by a physician
  3. Choose comfort-focused care rather than curative treatment for the terminal diagnosis

Medicaid and most private insurance plans also cover hospice care with similar eligibility requirements.

It is worth noting that eligibility is not always obvious from the outside. Many families are surprised to learn that their loved one qualifies. If you are wondering whether hospice might be appropriate, the most useful step is to request a hospice evaluation. There is no cost to ask, and no obligation to enroll.

You can read more about specific eligibility criteria here: Hospice Eligibility Guidelines.

What Hospice Care Includes

When a patient enrolls in hospice, they receive a full team of professionals, not a single provider who visits occasionally. Every discipline on that team has a specific role in supporting the patient and the family.

  • Medical Care and Symptom Management
  • Medications, Equipment, and Supplies
  • Hospice Aides
  • Social Work Support
  • Spiritual Care
  • Volunteer Support
  • Support for the Whole Family
  • Bereavement Care
  • Respite Care
  • Support for Children and Teens

The Four Levels of Hospice Care

Hospice is not a single, static level of care. Medicare recognizes four levels, and a patient may move between them depending on what is happening clinically.

  1. Routine Home Care – The most common level, providing regular visits at home while the patient is stable.
  2. Continuous Home Care – Intensive nursing and aide support at home during a period of medical crisis to manage acute symptoms.
  3. Inpatient Respite Care – Short-term inpatient care to give family caregivers a temporary break.
  4. General Inpatient Care – A higher level of inpatient care for symptoms that cannot be managed at home.

Each level is designed for a specific clinical situation. The hospice team continuously monitors the patient and adjusts the level of care to match what is actually needed.

You can explore each level in more detail: 4 Levels of Care

How Hospice Care Gets Started

Starting hospice care is simpler than most families expect. The general process looks like this:

  1. A physician refers the patient or the family calls directly. You do not need a referral to reach out to a hospice. You can call and ask questions at any time.
  2. The hospice team conducts an evaluation. A clinician visits to assess the patient’s condition and determine whether they meet the eligibility criteria.
  3. The patient and family choose to enroll. Enrollment is voluntary and can be reversed at any time.
  4. Equipment and medications are delivered. Often within hours of enrollment.
  5. The care team begins regular visits. A tailored schedule is built around the patient’s needs.

Learn more: Starting Hospice Care

Hospice Care Costs and Coverage

For patients who qualify, hospice services are fully covered under the Medicare Hospice Benefit. This includes nursing visits, aide services, social work, spiritual care, medications related to the hospice diagnosis, medical equipment, and bereavement support.

Most Medicaid plans and private insurance carriers also cover hospice, often with similar provisions to Medicare.

There are no copays or deductibles for hospice care under Medicare. Families can focus on time together, not unexpected bills.

Hospice Care in North Texas

Hospice care is one of the most meaningful and misunderstood resources available to families facing serious illness. If something in this guide raises a question, or if you are wondering whether it might be time to consider hospice for someone you love, call (469) 630-2538 or schedule a free in-home consultation anytime.

AlēvCare Hospice is a locally operated hospice serving families across North Texas, including Tarrant, Johnson, Hood, Parker, Dallas, and Ellis counties. The team provides care in patients’ homes, assisted living communities, and other home-like settings throughout the region.

AlēvCare was built around a “Grow Small” philosophy, intentional about maintaining a small, hometown feel where each family is known by name and every care decision is made with that specific patient and family in mind.

To find out if AlēvCare serves your area, visit the Service Area page or call directly at (469) 630-2538.

Filed Under: Hospice Basics Tagged With: comfort care, end of life care, hospice care basics, hospice care explained, hospice care for families, hospice eligibility, hospice services, Medicare hospice benefit, North Texas hospice, what is hospice care

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