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Welcome to Hospice & Palliative Care Today, a daily email summarizing numerous topics essential for understanding the current landscape of serious illness and end-of-life care. Teleios Collaborative Network podcasts review Hospice & Palliative Care Today monthly content - explore these and all TCN Talks podcasts.
Read today's entry for 1907-1916
Learn about our daily 25-part series , A History of Care: 250 Years of Need, Service and Hope
by Joy S. Berger, Editor in Chief, with AI assistance for graphics and research
Somerset hospice opening delayed by Medicare move
The Tribune-Democrat, Somerset, PA; by Kelly Urban; 6/20/26
Following a ribbon-cutting in May for the reopening of the Somerset inpatient hospice facility, Windber Hospice at Chan Soon-Shiong Medical Center at Windber has provided an update regarding the facility’s opening timeline. While the facility remains on track to reopen, the opening has been delayed by a recently announced nationwide Medicare enrollment moratorium affecting new hospice enrollments and hospice locations. ... “We know many families have been eagerly anticipating the return of inpatient hospice care in Somerset County, and we share their disappointment in this unexpected delay,” said Richard Sukenik, CEO of Chan Soon-Shiong Medical Center at Windber. “We are actively working with local, state and federal legislators to seek assistance and ensure they understand the importance of bringing this service back to Somerset County. We will continue pursuing every available avenue to move this project forward while preparing to welcome patients as soon as approval is granted.” [Access to the full article may be limited by a paywall.]
Leading with care
WilmingtonBiz, Wilmington, NC; by Beth A. Klahre; 6/22/26
Following a nationwide search, Karen Brubaker Miller was named president and CEO of Lower Cape Fear LifeCare this spring, becoming just the fourth CEO in the organization’s 46-year history. ... Miller said she plans to continue to grow palliative care services. In addition, with $5 million from the New Hanover Community Endowment, LifeCare will also administer The Guiding an Improved Dementia Experience (GUIDE) Program, a Medicare initiative launched in July 2024. Looking further ahead, Miller hopes to expand LifeCare’s geographic reach while building on the services in place.
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The illusion of choice at the end of life
Huffpost Personal; by Jennifer Obel, MD; 6/21/26
After the hospice nurse increased my mother’s morphine drip to ease the feeling of drowning, my mom never spoke to me again. By then, her metastatic lung cancer had taken nearly everything: her strength, her vigor, her independence. What remained was breathlessness that came in waves, each one more frightening than the last. The morphine was meant to quiet her panic and soften the feeling of suffocation. It did. It also closed the door on any final conversation. I was both daughter and oncologist, and the weight of those roles was devastating. I understood what was happening physiologically from decades of treating patients. That knowledge did nothing to make it easier to sit at her bedside, waiting for her to wake, unsure if she could hear me or say goodbye. ...
End of life nurse appeals for homemade property bags
Nursing In Practice; by Gee Harland; 6/17/26
An end of life nurse is leading an initiative to return patient belongings to families in homemade bags. Lead nurse Debbie Williams at Gloucestershire Health and Care NHS Foundation Trust was struck by how ‘awful’ she felt carrying her mother’s belongings home from hospital in a plastic bag after her death in 2014. She was inspired to start an appeal calling for homemade bags to be donated to replace the plastic patient bags – noting how it is the ‘simple things that make the difference.
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As a doctor and a daughter, finding gratitude amid loss on Father’s Day
The Baltimore Sun, Baltimore, MD; by Jean Marbella; 6/21/26
As a physician who specializes in palliative care, Dr. Delia Chiaramonte helps patients, families and medical professionals deal with the stresses and demands that come with serious and often terminal illnesses. Then, her own father died. "I thought I knew what this experience would be like," she said. "It is much more nuanced." On this, her second Father's Day without her own father, Chiaramonte taps into both her lived and professional experiences to offer advice on a holiday for those feeling more bereft than celebratory.
Dying without a safety net
MedCityNews; by Darren Schulte; 6/21/26
Recently, I reviewed the case of a woman with advanced metastatic breast cancer – we’ll call her Helen. ... As one therapy after another failed, Helen cycled in and out of the hospital: complications from treatment, complications from the cancer itself, and each time the system responded the only way it knew how – rapid escalation, ICU stays, more procedures, more drugs. Finally, a palliative care team was consulted during her last hospitalization. After long family meetings, Helen was discharged to hospice and died days later. Throughout that final year, Helen suffered. No one on her medical team had documented her wishes, preferences, or goals of care. No one had walked her through the trade-offs she faced with each treatment decision. The system did what it was designed to do, and it failed her completely.
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Cracks in the AI crystal ball: why clinical prediction tools fall short in the real world
Journal of General Internal Medicine; by David Gamble MD, Andrew Wong MD, MS and Amiran Baduashvili, MD; 6/22/26
... In this issue of the Journal of General Internal Medicine, Patel and colleagues evaluate the real-world performance of five Epic predictive AI tools: the Deterioration Index, Sepsis Model, Unplanned Readmission Model, End-of-Life Care Index, and Patient No-Show Model. Their systematic review and meta-analysis, encompassing 22 studies and over two million patients, focused on the models’ ability to distinguish between patients who ultimately did and did not experience a specific outcome—a property known as discrimination.
Dying patients shouldn’t have to choose between dialysis care and comfort
The Boston Globe, Boston, MA; by Patricia Ramsden; 6/22/26
... Medicare currently requires most end-stage kidney failure patients to choose between dialysis and hospice benefits. ... People dying from other terminal illnesses do not face this harsh choice. For several years, Dialysis Clinic, Inc. (DCI), the only national not-for-profit dialysis organization, has collaborated with not-for-profit hospice organizations to offer concurrent palliative dialysis and hospice care to selected patients in Tennessee and Western Pennsylvania. A 2026 collaboration between DCI and Care Dimensions, the largest hospice provider in the state, expanded that model to Eastern Massachusetts. However, this innovative program, relying on philanthropic funding, remains available only to a few patients.
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Father's Day flashback: Son's pitch to ailing dad to take in a game becomes gift for both
The Dallas Morning News; by Evan Grant; 6/21/26
I took my father to a baseball game Friday. It was his last. He is 87, dying from congestive heart failure and has been in the care of a hospice nurse for two months. We know what lies ahead shortly. And yet, this is not a sad story. Not in the least. Some 40 years ago, just down the block in what is now a parking lot, my dad introduced me to Major League Baseball. ... He opened a door to a world that has become my passion and my life. I wanted to simply try and repay him by taking him to one game as a way of saying thanks. It was going to be my Father's Day gift to him. Instead, it is about a gift he gave me.
Cincinnati Children's opened 6 locations in 2025. Here's why
Cincinnati Enquirer, Cincinnati, OH; by Carly Gist; 6/12/2026
Cincinnati Children's is expanding its access to care across the region, including in Northern Kentucky. The health system reported in its latest Community Impact Report, released to the public June 9, that six new locations opened in 2025, including facilities in previously underserved communities such as Clermont and Clinton counties. Rural areas often have limited access to specialized and emergency care, placing residents at a higher risk of health challenges and death, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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1907-1916: 250 Years - A History of Care
Hospice & Palliative Care Today; by Joy Berger; for 6/23/26
Read details and explore source links
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Paywalls: Some links may take readers to articles that either require registration or are behind a paywall. Disclaimer: Hospice & Palliative Care Today provides brief summaries of news stories of interest to hospice, palliative, and end-of-life care professionals (typically taken directly from the source article). Hospice & Palliative Care Today is not responsible or liable for the validity or reliability of information in these articles and directs the reader to authors of the source articles for questions or comments. Additionally, Dr. Cordt Kassner, Publisher, and Dr. Joy Berger, Editor in Chief, welcome your feedback regarding content of Hospice & Palliative Care Today. Unsubscribe: Hospice & Palliative Care Today is a free subscription email. If you believe you have received this email in error, or if you no longer wish to receive Hospice & Palliative Care Today, please unsubscribe here or reply to this email with the message “Unsubscribe”. Thank you.


