Daily Rates

NOTICE

The Center for Medicare Services (CMS) requires providers to publish their rates. As a non-profit hospice, our mission is to provide care and core services to all, regardless of insurance status or ability to pay. These rates are not invoiced to patients and families; these are the rates of reimbursement CMS will pay to our organization when a patient’s care is covered by Medicare.

These rates only apply to our Home Hospice Care and Compassionate Care Center programs.

Routine Home Care (1-60 Days): $197.22 per day
Routine Home Care (61+ Days):  $155.34 per day
Respite Care: $460.29 per day
General Inpatient Care: $1032.73 per day
Continuous Care:  $1393.65 per day

Isn’t it expensive?

NO. The cost of care is covered by Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance. Our grief care program is donor supported and you are not invoiced for care.

We provide care for all, regardless of insurance status or ability to pay.

News & Events

Mr. Eversole unboxing cropped

The Best Biscuit Breakfast

Harold Eversole is cared for by our home hospice program. He enjoys entertaining our team with interesting stories about his life.
One humorous story was about the long-running debate between him and his brother over which restaurant made the best biscuits and gravy.

The Hospice Care Plus Berea office building, shown with cars in the lot and the Hospice Care Plus sign in front.

Central Office to Relocate to Richmond

There are exciting changes ahead for Hospice Care Plus. When the COVID pandemic began, many organizations, including Hospice Care Plus, had to make changes to adapt to new circumstances.  Hospice found that many employees in the central office in Berea could work hybrid-remote or fully remote. This dramatically downsized the office space needed to run…

Santa and Anthony 8

Anthony’s Christmas with Santa

Anthony is a young man under our care. His home-hospice team worked to manage pain and symptoms and to support him and his family. As they got to know him, they were reminded that, even in the midst of crisis, children want to feel “normal.”

Lois Harrison on far right

To Preserve & Share a Song

All her life, Lois Harrison used the gift of her voice to express and share her faith. Singing was very important to her. But, now in the advanced stages of Parkinson’s disease, Lois could no longer speak.