Home Health Care, Medicare, and More

 

Home health care professionals provide medical attention in the comfort and convenience of your home. At some point in your loved one's illness, you may want to consider having professional home health care. Services can be provided at home that once required a visit to a physician's office or hospital.

Many patients will never need home health care, but those who do find that it provides great relief and comfort as well as good care.

Whatever your home-care needs--medical, nursing, physical, or other therapy; social services; housekeeping; or spiritual support--your health care team is available to help arrange the services you need.

Depending on your needs, you might receive home health services once or you might see various health care providers daily. Services are as individualized as the patient being helped, ranging from simple injections to complete care for a bedridden, seriously ill patient. The goal of home health care is to allow you to recover in the comfort and convenience of your own home with the important advantage of skilled medical treatment.

Home Care Service Providers and Types of Care They Provide
How to Set Up Home Care
Paying for Home Care: Medicare and Other Plans
Key Questions to Ask a Home Care Agency
Home Care Patient's Bill of Rights 
 

Latest Cancer News
HPV infection rates similar in men and women

October 10, 2008 — NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Although men are at high risk of acquiring human papillomavirus (HPV) infections, most last no more than a year, about the same time this sexually transmitted disease persists in women, researchers report in The Journal of Infectious Diseases.

Cancer common after liver transplantation

October 10, 2008 — NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who undergo liver transplantation, particularly children, are at increased risk for developing cancer, Finnish researchers report in the journal Liver Transplantation.

Lung cancer in non-smokers a separate disease

October 10, 2008 — NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Japanese investigators say that survival rates are better for patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who never smoked than in NSCLC patients with a history of smoking. Other disease characteristics are different as well between the two populations.

Select news items provided by Reuters Health