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22
The Right to Hospice Underutilization of hospice services is a public policy issue December 22, 2008 Cape Cod Times Lead Editorial Hospi...

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28
HYANNIS - The National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO), has announced that the First Prize in the Essay Category for their 2008 Annua...

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25
HOSPICE & PALLIATIVE CARE OF CAPE COD INVITES PUBLIC TO PREVIEW CAPE COD’S FIRST HOSPICE INPATIENT UNIT McCarthy Care Center in Sandwich Upgrad...

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10

NEWS RELEASE

HOSPICE & PALLIATIVE CARE OF CAPE COD
OFFERS NEW SUPPORT GROUPS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
COPING WITH GRIEF AND LOSS


HYANNIS, MA. - SEPT. 5, 2008 - Kids Grieve Too!®, a unique program run by the Grief Support and Referral Center of Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod, announces two new support groups for children ages 8 to 13 who have experienced the loss of a parent, relative or friend.

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29

CAPE COD TIMES
AUGUST 28th, 2008
Sharing the Caring
Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod sponsors a patient blog service so caregivers can post updates for friends and relatives

 

 

 

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26

Hospice can smooth a bumpy road
By David W. Rehm

June 23, 2008 6:00 AM

Carol Mithers' May 30 op-ed, "For the dying, less can be more," contains many excellent points about the challenges of caring for sick elders in today's health care system. Unwittingly, it also reinforces some common misperceptions about hospice care that can make the road to needed help seem bumpy indeed.

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05


HOSPICE & PALLIATIVE CARE OF CAPE COD EXPANDING MEDICAL CAPACITY OF HOSPICE HOUSE
Sandwich Facility to Become First Cape Cod Hospice Inpatient Unit 

HYANNIS – May 8, 2008 – Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod (H &PCCC) is pleased to announce it has received approval from the State of Massachusetts to upgrade the Mary McCarthy Hospice House in Sandwich to become a hospice Inpatient Unit (IPU), similar to an Acute Care/Intensive Care Unit.  Once the upgrade is completed and approved, this will be the only such license granted on Cape Cod and only the third in the state. This allows for the provision of a higher level of skilled care at the house, broadening its’ capacity to serve more acute patient needs.
 

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07

For the Elderly, Being Heard About Life’s End
By JANE GROSS


HANOVER, N.H. — Edie Gieg, 85, strides ahead of people half her age and plays a fast-paced game of tennis. But when it comes to health care, she is a champion of “slow medicine,” an approach that encourages less aggressive — and less costly — care at the end of life.

Grounded in research at the Dartmouth Medical School, slow medicine encourages physicians to put on the brakes when considering care that may have high risks and limited rewards for the elderly, and it educates patients and families how to push back against emergency room trips and hospitalizations designed for those with treatable illnesses, not the inevitable erosion of advanced age.

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07

From The Enterprise - Upper Cape Cod News and Information

Waquoit Couple Changing Way People Look At Hospice

By MICHAEL C. BAILEY
May 1, 2008 - 11:33:56 AM

     Say the word “hospice” to most people and they envision a place where people go to die.
     Say it to David W. Rehm of Waquoit, the new president and CEO of Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod (H&PCCC), and he will tell you otherwise. To him, it is a place where people go to live their remaining days to their fullest.
     “There’s something about the word ‘hospice’ that frightens people…people think hospice is for the very end, when there’s no hope,” he said, “but that simply is not true.”
   

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13

   BEING A HOSPICE VOLUNTEER:

LIFE LESSONS OVER CRIBBAGE AND ICE CREAM

 HYANNIS – Mar. 19, 2008 - You’ve likely heard of "Tuesdays with Morrie", the runaway best-seller by Mitch Albom about his relationship with Morrie Schwartz. You’re less likely to have heard about "Thursdays with Ben", as retired development officer and hospice volunteer Joe Lucier calls his latest volunteer experience. From June to December of last year, Lucier, age 76, spent every Thursday afternoon playing cribbage with 88-year-old Ben Arnold, in Arnold’s Sagamore Beach home. Arnold had been diagnosed with congestive heart failure, and Lucier was assigned as his hospice volunteer through Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod.

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22

New CEO happy to step aboard ‘flagship’ health agency

By Linda Riddle
Barnstable Patriot
A childhood exposed to the complexities of bereavement and an adulthood touched by early death have informed the career of David Rehm, who assumed the position of chief executive officer of Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod on Feb. 4. He succeeds Marilyn Hannus, who retired after 22 years with the organization.

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14

 

 NEW CEO NAMED

TO HOSPICE & PALLIATIVE CARE OF CAPE COD
David W. Rehm of the Washington Home and Community Hospices to Lead the Cape’s Premier Hospice Organization 
 HYANNIS – Dec. 19, 2007 – Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod (H &PCCC) is pleased to announce that David W. Rehm has accepted the position of Chief Executive Officer and is slated to begin sometime in early February. He succeeds Marilyn Hannus, who is retiring after 22 years with H & PCCC. The organization is Cape Cod’s longest serving and only freestanding non-profit hospice.
 
“I’m excited about the opportunity to provide the next generation of leadership to an organization with such a proud heritage of service to the Cape Cod community”, Mr. Rehm said. “My wife and I are delighted to be returning home to Southern New England.”

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16
Hospice: An Overlooked Option
The vast majority of Americans forgo valuable end-of-life care
By Dennis Thompson
 Posted 12/16/07

 SUNDAY, Dec. 16 (HealthDay News) -- Hospice care helps terminally ill patients prepare for death, treating their symptoms and pain and preparing them -- and their families -- for the end.

The patients maintain their dignity and some semblance of control over their life. Their families receive counseling to help them come to terms with their impending loss.
It's humane. It's caring. It's thoughtful.
Why, then, do so few Americans chose to receive hospice care, even though Medicare covers the expense?

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09
YOUR HOSPICE BENEFIT: PLANNING THE JOURNEY
By Susan Garcia Strauss; R.N., C.H.C.E., B.S.
Vice President of Clinical Operations
Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod
Falmouth, Sandwich, Bourne and Mashpee Enterprises, Friday, Nov. 2, 2007
 
We are used to preparing for the milestones of our lives. Going on vacation, buying a new house, starting a family – all require extensive planning in order to do it right. But how much do we plan for the most major transitions of our lives, namely, the bookends of birth and death? None of us have any choice or influence on who will be with us when we are born, but we can choose who can support and comfort us as we come to the end of our lives.

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09

Supporting spirit in the final stages of life

 Conference helps clergy of all faiths reach out to the terminally ill

By Johanna Crosby
STAFF WRITER CAPE COD TIMES
November 01, 2007 6:00 AM
 
SANDWICH - Sharon Ferraro of Bourne, a medium, wants to be more compassionate and help alleviate her clients' fear of death.
 
Pat Hart of Elder Services of Cape Cod hopes to feel more comfortable talking to people about end-of-life issues.
 
And interfaith minister Kathleen Geagan is seeking new ways to connect spiritually to those who are dying and "recharge my feeling and passion for this work."
 
They were among 40 or so spiritual caregivers - clergy, lay ministers, hospice chaplains and volunteers, parish nurses, outreach workers and pastoral visitation teams - who attended an all-day educational program on "Spiritual Care at the End of Life" last Thursday at Corpus Christi Church in Sandwich. Sponsored by Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod, the Cape Cod Council of Churches and the Massachusetts Compassionate Care Coalition, the pilot program was designed to help participants increase their knowledge and skills so they can more effectively provide care and support to patients and families at the end of life. 

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07

The Pediatric Palliative Care Team of Cape Cod has begun a new program of supportive services for children with life-limiting illnesses and their families.

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21

Sitting in the Falmouth office of Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod one recent Friday, I received a phone call from our medical director, Suzana Makowski, M.D., calling from our Hyannis headquarters. “Can you come over to our Mary McCarthy House in an hour? We’re going to have a wedding there today”. Now, the Mary McCarthy House in Sandwich is no ordinary house – it’s the Cape’s only hospice residence, designed specifically as a place where patients can live out their final days in peaceful and supportive surroundings. Though most of the organization’s 800 patients a year choose to receive services in their own homes, it’s a wonderful option for those who are not able to be cared for at home. It’s a beautiful but unusual choice for a wedding. None had ever taken place there before.

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12

Father’s Day can be bittersweet for those of us who no longer have our fathers, or who live too far away to see them. But when Bob Keeling, who lost his dad years ago, decided to volunteer for Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod, he formed a lasting bond that helped fill the void of his father’s loss.

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