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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.
Hospice & Palliative Care Today moves toward this July 4th--the 250th anniversary of the United States--by celebrating a different kind of story: the long, uneven history of how Americans have responded to suffering. This mural invites us to see that across war, epidemic disease, poverty, injustice, disability, serious illness, dying, and grief, the story of our country is also a story of service—of people who nursed, advocated, reformed, comforted, and widened the circle of care.
Our daily 25-part series traces a history marked by struggle and courage, by failures that demanded truth-telling and by acts of compassion that opened new possibilities for healing—not a straight-line tale of progress, nor a simple chronicle of harm. Join us each day in our “Timelines: Where we are now,” reflecting on how the past shapes the hospice and palliative care we provide today—and the chapters we are called to write next. ~ Joy S. Berger, Editor in Chief
The ASCENT Consortium to Publish Two Requests for Applications
ASCENT Consortium press release; 6/4/26
The ASCENT Consortium is pleased to announce plans to publish a Request for Applications (RFA) for the ASCENT Research Scholar and Pilot and Exploratory Studies Awards Programs.
National Alliance for Care at Home responds to GAO report regarding Medicare hospice payment
The National Alliance for Care at Home (The Alliance), Alexandria, VA; Press Release; 6/9/26
The National Alliance for Care at Home (the Alliance) today responded to a new report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) recommending that Congress consider directing the Department of Health and Human Services to restructure the Medicare hospice payment system to better promote routine home care payment efficiency. ... The GAO report asserts that shifting hospice to per-visit payment rates comparable to home health would have reduced Medicare spending by $7.6 billion for a selected group of beneficiaries in 2024. However, these savings are generated in part by paying less to “low visit” hospices that are concentrated in known high-fraud areas. ...
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Los Angeles County Fraud Hotline
LACounty.gov | Department of Auditor-Controller, Office of County Investigations; 6/8/26
You may remain anonymous, but having the ability to contact the informant is often critical to the success of an investigation. If you choose to provide your name and contact information, the County will hold your identity in confidence to the extent allowed by law. You can read more about this here.
Aroostook Hospice Foundation nets funding
The County, Presque Isle, ME; by Aroostook Hospice; 6/3/26
The Aroostook Hospice Foundation recently received generous donor advised funding through the Maine Community Foundation in support of its Charity Care Patient Assistance Fund. The Foundation received a $15,000 contribution from the Willey Family Foundation as part of its five year pledge commitment connected to the naming of Suite 4 at the Aroostook House of Comfort. The gift was designated toward Charity Care. In addition, the Foundation received a $1,000 contribution from the Mimi Fund.
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When the storm hits: how hospice providers help protect Florida’s most vulnerable patients
South Florida Hospital News and Healthcare Report; by Kathleen Coronado; 6/1/26
In South Florida, hurricane preparedness is a part of life. Hospitals activate emergency operations centers, nursing homes review evacuation plans, and families rush to gather supplies before a storm makes landfall. For hospice providers, preparedness carries an additional layer of responsibility. Patients receiving end-of-life care are among the most medically vulnerable members of our communities. Many rely on oxygen, medications, specialized equipment or around-the-clock support that cannot simply pause when severe weather arrives. At VITAS Healthcare, hurricane preparedness is not a seasonal checklist. It is a year-round operational priority designed to ensure continuity of compassionate care before, during and after a disaster.
Editor's Note: The importance of preparedness cannot be over-emphasized. Read. Learn. Assess your current risks and systems. Don't just rely on Emergency & Disaster Plans developed some 10 years ago. Update. Train. Use and evaluate on smaller scales when threatening storms or other events occur.
Families struggle to secure home hospice
U.S. News; by Cameron Blake; 6/3/26
A woman’s effort to honor her husband Craig’s last wish to die at home became a second fight alongside his bladder cancer, highlighting growing strains in access to hospice care outside the hospital. The caregiver, who asked to speak about her experience, said the couple faced delays and mixed guidance when trying to arrange home-based support in the final weeks of his illness. Their story mirrors a national problem as more families seek comfort-centered care while agencies report tight staffing and stricter eligibility reviews.
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Dr. Joan Teno exposes the hidden problems with hospice ratings and quality scores | part two
Teleios Collaborative Network (TCN); podcast hosted by Chris Comeaux with Dr. Joan Teno; 6/3/26
Hospice quality ratings play a critical role in helping patients and families make informed care decisions—but are they telling the whole story? In Part Two of this compelling conversation, Dr. Joan Teno continues her deep dive into the challenges surrounding hospice quality measurement, transparency, and consumer choice. Building on the foundation established in Part One, she explores how healthcare leaders can better leverage existing data to help patients and families identify high-quality hospice providers while avoiding misleading or incomplete information. Dr. Teno also shares her vision for a future where technology, data analytics, and artificial intelligence empower consumers to make more informed decisions during some of life’s most difficult moments.
National HealthCare Corp. closes 5-SNF, $50.5M acquisition
McKnights Senior Living; by Kathleen Steele Gaivin; 6/7/26
National HealthCare Corp. and its affiliates have closed on the previously announced $50.5 million purchase of five skilled nursing facilities from National Health Corp., the Murfreesboro, TN-based company announced Thursday [6/5/26]. ... Four of the SNFs are in Tennessee, and the other is in South Carolina.
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LA County fraud: Why hospice care became the new target
Film Daily; by Simone Barbon; 6/3/26
Los Angeles County has become the focal point of multiple federal, state, and local actions against hospice fraud schemes that target Medicare and Medi-Cal. The concentration of facilities, unusual billing patterns, and recent arrests explain why regulators treat the county as ground zero. ... Data shows unusual density. Records reviewed by CBS News found roughly 1,800 hospices operating in Los Angeles County. More than 700 of them triggered multiple state fraud indicators. One stretch of Victory Boulevard contained nearly 500 hospices within three miles, and a single building listed 89 separate companies. Typical facilities in the county billed Medicare about $29,000 per patient. The national average sits at $13,200. That gap prompted auditors to flag the region years before arrests began.
Editor's Note: This article describes complex factors of the hospice fraud crisis with clarity for the general public.
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Medicare hospice: action needed to pay more efficiently for routine home care
GAO - U.S. Government Accountability Office; GAO-26-107585; publicly released 6/9/26
Fast Facts
Editor's Note: National Alliance for Care at Home responds to GAO report regarding Medicare hospice payment
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1817-1826: 250 Years - A History of Care
Hospice & Palliative Care Today; by Joy Berger; for 6/13/26
Read details and explore source links
New York City Common Council laws regulating funerals of enslaved persons – 1722
American School for the Deaf, Hartford, Connecticut, April 15, 1817
The Fine Print:
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.


