Similar words: hospital, inhospitable, suspicion, suspicious, despicable, phosphorescent, host, whose. Meaning: ['hɑspɪs /'hɒs-] n. 1. a lodging for travelers (especially one kept by a monastic order) 2. a program of medical and emotional care for the terminally ill.
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(31) Palliative care and hospice care became two of the first casualties.
(32) Louise met Diana at the hospice a year ago and again last month.
(33) Pensioners at the complex have been collecting money to help the town's hospice appeal for the last two years.
(34) The hospice movement, in its care of the terminally ill, is the living recognition of these sombre facts.
(35) They thought they would get a warm welcome when they offered the money to the charity-funded hospice in Milton, Cambs.
(36) Patients are eligible for hospice care when doctors expect them to live six months or less.
(37) St Teresa's Hospice car stickers are now on sale at 50p each and should soon be appearing all over town.
(38) Nevin suggested that hospices could distribute the medical marijuana to hospice patients who were too ill to leave their homes.
(39) When I was working at a hospice I followed up bereaved people who it was felt might need some support.
(40) Volunteers are still needed to help the hospice expand its current home sitter service.
(41) The donated pony will be cared for until the hospice becomes operational.
(42) Only high spot from what should have been a red letter day was the terrific £300 raised for the local Hartlepool hospice.
(43) They have started a hospice for terminal patients.
(44) Cicely Saunders, President of the National Hospice Council.
(45) He died in March at St Julia's Hospice.
(46) Home hospice care patients had better psychological well - being than those with other care patterns.
(47) On Saturday her parents and siblings visited her at her hospice.
(48) My definition of a good hospice is one where some of the patients start feeling too good to die.
(49) The hospice movement started in 1983 , and the first hospice was set up in 1990.
(50) I've told you before about Florence Steen of South Dakota, who was 88 years old, and insisted that her daughter bring an absentee ballot to her hospice bedside.
(51) I called the local hospice after consulting with Dr. Isaacoff.
(52) When Dame Cicely Saunders, who founded the Saint Christopher's Hospice in London in 1967, first aired those ideas, the medical world was hostile.
(53) Five weeks later, she was sitting in the sun lounge of the hospice.
(54) The premise of hospice care is very close to the bone for me.
(55) But the hospice caregivers celebrated , and he became their superstar.
(56) TERRI SCHIAVO lies in a Florida hospice, fed by a drip feed.
(56) Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and create good sentences.
(57) Cicely Saunders, President of the National Hospice Council and a founder member of the hospice movement, argues that euthanasia doesn't take into account that there are ways of caring for the dying.
(58) Hospice care is the most humanization development in human society. It is one of the highest embodiments of humanism in modern society and the concrete representation of human orientation as well.
(59) Doctors, nurses, support groups and hospice are good sources of dementia information.
(60) Companionship can include a spouse, member, hired caregiver, hospice volunteer, Good Samaritan, or pet.
More similar words: hospital, inhospitable, suspicion, suspicious, despicable, phosphorescent, host, whose, those, ghost, bathos, hostile, hostage, prospect, spit, pick, spin, atmosphere, so to speak, to speak of, spiky, spill, spite, spine, topic, introspect, pickup, pick off, pick out, depict.