Palliative Care
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Customised specialist palliative care for your needs
It can be a difficult moment for you and your loved ones when you have a condition that is life-threatening. With the help of our palliative care at home service, we hope to ease your suffering and improve everyone's quality of life.
Our palliative care at home programme helps adults who have been told they have a terminal illness but still want to live comfortably in their own homes. This service is available at all phases of disease, diagnosis, therapy, recovery, passing away, and grief.
Our palliative care at home service's primary goal is to maximise your and your family's quality of life. We recognise that your loved ones may feel strongly about your condition, and that it may be challenging for you to communicate your feelings without upsetting them.
In order to talk about your feelings and get more support, we can assist you and your loved ones. We can also offer help at times of bereavement.
We make sure that you are treated as an individual, with decency, and respect as part of our compassionate palliative care at home service. A personalised care plan that takes into consideration your needs, preferences, and choices will be given to you. In order to maintain continuity of care, we only choose a small number of caregivers to work with you and get to know you personally.
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What is palliative care?
For those with serious or terminal illnesses, such as an advanced form of cancer or dementia, palliative care, often known as end-of-life care, is specialised medical care. Our aim here is to offer the necessary support to keep you as comfortable as possible by focusing on relieving the pain, stress, and symptoms of a serious illness. Our ultimate concern is to lessen the emotional toll of illnesses while improving the patient's quality of life as well as that of their relatives and friends.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is palliative care?
Palliative care is support that is available to help people with significant or life-threatening medical conditions, such as cancer, live better lives. Palliative care offers comfort to the patient and their families by focusing on the patient as a whole rather than simply their illness.
Who gives palliative care?
Palliative care is provided by our expertly trained New Support Carers. They can enable the individual to stay comfortable at home, as well as assisting their families with emotional support.
What is the difference between palliative care and a hospice?
Hospice care is appropriate when treatment is no longer the goal of care, favouring the recipient's quality of life, whereas palliative care can start whenever the patient chooses.