Hospice Care Quotes

Quotes tagged as "hospice-care" Showing 1-6 of 6
Lisa J. Shultz
“A paradigm shift of viewing palliative care or hospice as a gift instead of seeing it as giving up has the potential to change the way we experience advanced age.”
Lisa J. Shultz, A Chance to Say Goodbye: Reflections on Losing a Parent

Lisa J. Shultz
“When I reflect on the stories of death supported by hospice care and contrast it with our story depicting an absence of support, I find myself dealing with envy and anger. I have channeled those emotions into this book with the hope that hearing our story might give someone else a chance to create a better ending to the life of a loved one.”
Lisa J. Shultz, A Chance to Say Goodbye: Reflections on Losing a Parent

Kim van Alkemade
“What life she had left could be measured in hours. Small recompense though they were, they belonged to me now. I had only to claim them.”
Kim van Alkemade, Orphan Number Eight

Anne Clendening
“Hospice care? No, you must mean Frisbee game. Because there's no way my brother and I aren't outside right now playing Frisbee in the middlle of the street in the middle of summer and there are weird bugs everywhere no matter how much bug spray we put on ourselves and our mom is coming out to tell us for the third and final time, C'mon inside kids, it's getting dark.”
Anne Clendening, Bent: How Yoga Saved My Ass

Joel Kriofske
“The author "nails it" in terms of how to deal with a parent's dementia. Rather than browbeating the subject, the author "plays along" and tries to enter the subject's own dementia-challenged "reality." The book contains excellent coping strategies and methodology for dealing with someone suffering with and enduring the pain of dementia or Alzheimer's. It does so with sensitivity, candor and laugh-provoking humor.”
Joel Kriofske

“Spiritual care lies at the heart of hospice. It says we are here. We will be with you in your living and your dying. We will free you from pain and give you the freedom to find your own meaning in your own life – your way. We will comfort you and those you love – not always with words, often with a touch or a glance. We will bring you hope – not for tomorrow but for this day. We will not leave you. We will watch with you. We will be there. – Dr. Dorothy Ley”
Dorothy Ley