Ambulatory Hospice Care Services
Management of Lazarus Hospice Ambulatory Care Services
Elizabeth Schmidt-Pabst
030 46705-276
Write an e-mail
Elizabeth Schmidt-Pabst
030 46705-276
Write an e-mail
You need advice and support
We offer palliative care counseling services. For this we visit you at home and advise you there of the possibilities and ways that every day life can continue to be patterned given a completely changed life situation with a severe, incurable illness. Together with you we look at how, in view of everything, an improvement to the quality of life and a sense of security and comfort can become a reality. For this purpose, together we would turn our attention among other things, to the existing opportunities:
- To alleviate adverse symptoms such as pains, nausea and constipation during the progression of the illness
- to augment the care situation at home
- to reduce the load on family members and others associated
- to tap into unexploited resources in the social environment
- to allow for dealing openly with the feelings of sorrow and of pain
- to make use of supplementing specialized offers in medicine and care
Volunteer Support
- Volunteers provide support for critically ill, dying people and their family and friends at home, in the establishment of nursing care, in the hospital and in the residential hospice.
- The volunteers want to donate some of their strength, time and solicitude to dying people and their families. They perform no nursing care, but rather augment the nursing services and the care of family and home-care doctors.
- The volunteers are open for discussions, dedicating their time, attention, calmness and understanding. They provide company on walks, to local authorities or when visiting relatives or cultural events. Visits from volunteers can also help to ease the burden for relatives.
- The volunteers also offer to keep vigil. Through this they wish to stand by the dying person in their remaining few days and their final hours. In doing so, an accompaniment until death is strived for through the commitment of a larger number of volunteers.
- The volunteers receive intensive instruction from us for their demanding work and receive ongoing supervision during their work. They are subject to professional secrecy.
Friends of the Lazarus Hospice Association
There are no costs to you when volunteers support people who are ill. We would be pleased to receive a donation or membership in the
Friends of the Lazarus Hospice Association.
Write an e-mail
Culture Sensitive Care for the Dying
The Project “Far from Home at the End of Life” has been running since 2013 as part of the Lazarus Hospice Ambulatory Care Services. For us it is important that regardless of their cultural and religious background, at the end of their life people are provided with medical and care services and can get psychosocial support. Our volunteers themselves come from many cultural and religious contexts. We have volunteers whose mother tongue is English, Arabic, Portuguese, Polish, Turkish and Korean.
The volunteers are Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, Jewish or open spiritually. They are taught by us in a culture sensitive environment and are always open-minded and approachable with all of the people they meet.
Patient Decree Counseling
Our trained staff will be happy to advise you in the creation of a patient decree and/or a healthcare proxy / care ordinance. When you one day find yourself no longer able to make decisions, you can establish at this point in the patient decree, if and how a medical treatment should then take place. With the health care proxy you assign a person that you trust with the implementation of your intentions. The creation of this document is an important step in the provisions. In a counseling session many uncertainties can be cleared up and some fears overcome. The first helpful step in the establishment of the patient decree is to become aware of your own values and wishes in relation to life and death.The following questions can be helpful in this
- How do I see my life up until now?
- What is important to me for my future?
- What makes my life worth living?
- If I had an illness that was chronic or leading to death, what would be important to me in this situation? How much or how little would I actually want to know about my condition?
- What does it mean to me to be dependent and/or reliant on help?
- Has my attitude to dying and death changed over the years? If yes, how?
- What significance do faith, religion and spirituality have in my life? Does this influence my attitude towards dying?
- What thoughts have I already had about my funeral?
Patient Decree
(link to Federal Ministry of Justice and Consumer Protection – BMJV)
Team
Management of Lazarus Hospice Ambulatory Care Services
Elizabeth Schmidt-Pabst
Phone: 030 46705-276
Fax: 030 46705-277
Write an e–mail
Coordinators of Lazarus Hospice Ambulatory Care Services
Andrea Biank
Annett Hardenberg
Peggy Nitzke
Write an e-mail
Elizabeth Schmidt-Pabst
Andrea Biank
Peggy Nitzke
Britta Fey
Previous slide
Next slide