Hospice eligibility in San Antonio is the same as anywhere in the U.S. (including under Medicare guidelines). In plain English, a person typically qualifies when:
1. A doctor certifies they have a terminal illness
This means the patient is expected to have a life expectancy of about 6 months or less, if the illness runs its usual course.
2. The focus of care shifts to comfort over cure
Hospice is for patients who choose comfort-focused care (pain and symptom management, emotional/spiritual support) rather than ongoing curative treatment.
3. There is evidence of ongoing decline (common qualifying patterns)
Eligibility is usually supported by things like:
- Frequent hospitalizations or ER visits
- Significant, unintentional weight loss or poor appetite
- Increased weakness, sleeping more, reduced mobility
- Needing more help with daily activities (bathing, dressing, eating)
- Worsening symptoms despite treatment (pain, shortness of breath, fatigue)
4. They have a qualifying diagnosis (examples, not a full list)
People often enter hospice with conditions such as:
- Advanced cancer
- End-stage heart failure (CHF)
- COPD / advanced lung disease
- Dementia/Alzheimer’s in later stages
- End-stage kidney or liver disease
- ALS, Parkinson’s, or other advanced neurological diseases
- Stroke with major functional decline
Two important things families should know
- You don’t need to “wait until the last days.” Many families say they wish they’d started earlier.
- Hospice can continue beyond 6 months if the person is re-certified as still eligible.
If you share the diagnosis and what’s been changing (hospital visits, weight loss, mobility, etc.), I can tell you what typically supports hospice eligibility and what questions to ask a local provider.
Call (210) 874-4999 today and find out how quality, compassionate care can add quality and time to your life..
