Providing care in all of Cook, Will & DuPage Counties, Illinois
Call us for free home Consultation and Evaluation at 7087055841
The mission of Shiloh Hospice is to attend to those in the final stages of liver disease. We aim to alleviate discomfort, manage symptoms, increase the quality of life and lessen apprehension for patients and their families. When a patient’s liver disease attains cirrhosis, a stage when the liver damage is permanent, it becomes a End Stage Liver Disease (ESLD) i.e. a terminal disease.
Seeing the slow decline of a patient with liver disease, it can be problematic to decide when it is accurate for hospice.
Not all patients with ESLD want or are suitable for a liver transplant. Thus, signs become challenging to manage, and quality of life worsens. And patients, plus their families and doctors, should think through hospice.
Don’t postpone the choice. Shiloh Hospice can considerably improve the quality of life for the patient and the family. If you feel it is time to focus on your loved ones comfort and symptoms control then hospice is the place to go.
A doctor can tell you the life expectancy of the patient. Nevertheless, look for these usual indications that the disease has evolved.
Shiloh Hospice assesses the patient’s status and revises the maintenance plan as ESLD symptoms and states transform. The objective of hospice is to manage the symptoms and ensure that the patient has a better quality of life from the distressing symptoms. Also, to alleviate physical and psychological suffering. Thus, patients can hold on to their self-worth and comfortable through hospice support.
Hospice offers complete medical equipment needed for patients with ESLD:
Shiloh Hospice helps your loved ones to handle breathing and bowel problems. In addition, it caters to itchy skin, abdominal distress, agitation, misunderstanding, and additional symptoms usual to patients of ESLD.
As the end of life draws near, patients every so often become incapable of articulating their requirements. Therefore, Shiloh Hospice will make a plan that tackles discomfort, hydration, nourishment, skincare, distress, and additional symptoms generally related to the diagnosis.
A care plan is made with the recommendation and consensus of the patient’s primary physician (if elected to participate in care by patient) and hospice medical director. Furthermore, hospice organizes and delivers all medications related to hospice diagnosis, medical equipment, and curative tools related to the diagnosis. Thus, we make it unquestionable that patients are in the best of hands.