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Dying at Home

While often times difficult, dying at home can reveal love and gratitude in profound moments that are rarely experienced during a lifetime.

70% of people surveyed say that their preference is dying at home. Many people are under the impression that hospice employees come into your home and care for your patient as if they were in a hospital. This is not the case.

 

Since hospice care is regulated by Medicare and insurance, time spent with patients and families is limited. This means the family,  friends, and community do most of the care up until and after death.

 

Death care is unique. When people are dying, they no longer need food, they sleep most of the time, and withdraw from their surroundings in preparation for separating from this world.

“I called our doula late at night when things got difficult. It turned out to be my mom’s last night. When she died, our doula came and stayed. She is the one who guided us after mom died.”

Doula and patient

Doulas actively guide a person and family through the labor of death and transcendence of the body so that they learn to be with death as it unfolds.

 

A Guide on the Stages of Death

Advice for paying attention to the needs of a dying person.

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