Tell Us Your Story

Care partners at Hospice of Dayton and Hospice of Butler & Warren Counties go above and beyond to invest in each patient and consider his or her time with us to be a celebration of life. It’s our goal to help you cement your loved one’s legacy by embracing his or her life story and presenting it to others. Please, share your loved one’s life story with us today. We believe that illustrating life’s stories provides peace of mind for families while strengthening our community.  Contact 937-256-4490 ext. 4409 or fill out the form below to share your story today.

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Tell Us Your Story

Run the Air Force Marathon with the Hospice of Dayton Team and Run With Purpose!

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Saturday, September 15, 2012
Wright Patterson Air Force Base

Hospice of Dayton has proudly partnered with the United States Air Force as a charity partner at the 2012 USAF Marathon. Join the HOD Team and Run With Purpose!

HOD Team members commit to raising a minimum of $500 for Hospice of Dayton. Once this fundraising minimum is met, HOD will secure your place on our team.

As a HOD Team member, you will receive the following:

  • One registration in either the half or full marathon
  • One ticket to either the Gourmet Pasta Dinner or the Breakfast of Champions
  • An official Air Force Marathon tech shirt
  • An HOD T-Shirt
  • An HOD water bottle
  • Use of HOD Hospitality Tent before and after the race (amenities include fruit, snacks, water, sports drinks, massage)

We currently have openings for both the full and the half marathon.

 Please download both forms below for more information and to register as a HOD runner. Completed forms may be submitted via email to mbernard@hospiceofdayton.org, or mailed to:

Hospice of Dayton
Attn: USAF Marathon
324 Wilmington Pike
Dayton OH 45420

Registration Forms:
USAF Marathon Runner Agreement – USAF
USAF Marathon Runner Agreement – HOD

To make a donation on behalf of an HOD Team runner, download the Donation Form below:

USAF Marathon Donor Form

Registration deadline is July 9, 2012.

Contact Amanda Burks, Director, Community Outreach and Special Events at aburks@hospiceofdayton.org or call 937.312.4641 with question.

For more information about the Air Force Marathon, please visit www.usafmarathon.com.

Belinda Post Touches Lives as an Ambassador

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A volunteer for eight years, Belinda Post was one of the first ambassadors when the volunteer services staff started the program in 2003.

Belinda retired as secretary for Central Presbyterian Church in Miami Township after 20 years in 2002.

“I had been looking for something meaningful to do in retirement,” said Belinda. “I saw the care Hospice of Dayton gave my mother in 2002, and I wanted to help in any way I could.”

In the beginning she served as ambassador on one shift. She said she is drawn to the patients
and now serves two days a week for 10 hours. “Just being with people touches my life,” said Belinda. “One memorable visit was when I helped a gentleman downstairs to see his wife, who had not opened her eyes for days. When he stroked her hand, she opened her eyes, and they had a special moment. And that gave me a special moment, too.”

Tom Hand Composes Song for Hospice of Dayton

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“Theme for the Hospice of Dayton” is the name of a song created by Tom Hand and will be part of his first CD, “From Mind to Hand” with 15 other original compositions.

Tom became a volunteer in 2011. He has played the piano for over 50 years. He plays and sings a very wide range of music including, classical, blues, rock, ragtime, folk, ballads, new age, country, gospel and swing. He is an engaging and fun entertainer with a comedic wit, great voice, and impressive keyboard skills.

“I’m just the Thursday Night Piano guy,” said Tom with a twinkle in his eyes as he reflects on
playing the grand piano in the Great Room each  Thursday.

Tom has been instrumental in securing two new grand pianos, one for the Great Room and one for the new Shaw lower level atrium. As a result, the holidays will have wonderful piano music in two areas now. He is semi-retired from the facility management profession, giving him more time to share his music and entertain at different venues.

Volunteers to Help Occupational Therapists Serve Patients

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Hospice of Dayton now offers occupational therapy to patients. Two occupational therapists, Angelene Moore and Casey Haper, joined the staff to provide occupational therapy (OT) services. They are collaborating with Volunteer Services in training volunteers to help with their services to patients.

The purpose of Occupational Therapy is to help people participate in the activities they want and need.

“These are the ordinary and familiar things that people do every day,” said Angelene Moore.

The goal of therapy is determined by the patient and family, because everyone has his or her own unique
needs and priorities. For those persons with a life threatening illness, occupational therapists are
uniquely qualified to assist with the continued engagement in meaningful daily occupations within the hospice community of care. Occupational therapy services are designed to assist patients in achieving a maximum level of independence and quality of life. Some examples of interventions include:

  • Caregiver training
  • Management of activities of Daily Living such as toileting, bathing, and dressing
  • Home safety and fall risk reduction
  • Functional ambulation and transfers
  • Environmental modifications and/or the use of assistive technology
  • Wheelchair or medical equipment evaluation and selection
  • Engagement in patient determined leisure pursuits and meaningful activities, in which volunteers help.

The Volunteer Forum on February 2 will have a presentation by Angelene and Casey on occupational therapy. Volunteer Services will introduce opportunities to serve in OT.

Life’s Harvest Fills Cornucopias For Patients, Families in Hospice Care

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Miriam Morrison Director of Volunteer Services

Growing up in rural Michigan amidst a patchwork of farms as a PK (preacher’s kid) and visiting my grandpa’s farm near Fostoria, Ohio, in Wood County, I saw the entire cycle of life through spring planting to harvest. I watched corn grow from seeds to rich green foliage and then to maturity with dry, golden brown stalks with the ears of corn ready for harvesting. Grandpa felt gratification for a good harvest, because it meant food for many people. He always felt especially grateful when he heard that some of his grain
ended up feeding hungry people around the world.

Like my grandpa, you plant seeds, too. Your seeds are those of love, care, comfort, compassion, companionship, and peace, not only for the patient but also caregivers.

Caregivers with a loved one in hospice care need support. Sometimes caregivers live at a distance and driving back and forth from their homes to the loved one can take a toll. They hold down full-time jobs and have family responsibilities.

As many of you know, my father was in hospice care in Columbus, Ohio, before his death September 21. For seven months, I became a caregiver of my father and mother almost every weekend, often Thurs. night through Sunday night, driving to the office on Monday morning at 6:30 a.m. This gave my sister some much-needed respite. When we couldn’t be there, we had volunteers sit with my father in the skilled care facility where he lived for the last three months. This made such a difference in his life and ours. My father
and our family reaped a full harvest.

From the soothing words of author Ken Nerburn,

Care for those around you.
Look past your differences.
These choices are no less than yours,
Their choices no more easily made.
And give, give in any way you can,
Of whatever you possess.
To give is to you.
To withhold is to wither.
Care less for your harvest
Than for how it is shared,
And your life will have meaning
And your heart will have peace.

Thank you for sharing your harvest and for giving patients like my father love, comfort, care, companionship, compassion, and peace. What a difference it makes to caregivers like me!

Excitement Abounds as Hospice of Dayton Closes the Year

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2011 has been marked by an extensive refresh project of the facilities at Hospice of Dayton. As the year draws to a close, construction will be completed for Phase I. Volunteers coming to the December 12 Holiday Luncheon, sponsored by the Hospice of Dayton staff, will see a changed facility.

Volunteers will be greeted with newly remodeled patient rooms, easier way finding, a renovated Community Room, new offices for Human Resources and Education in Shaw, a new Shaw entry, a lower-level Shaw atrium with grand piano, a new visitor entrance, a family, child-friendly family lounge, and most exciting of all, an entire hallway for the new volunteer workroom, and Volunteer Services offices.

NEW WAY FINDING
Instead of numbered hallways of the past, the patient hallways are named after trees. In Shaw there are the Buckeye, Maple, and Ginkgo, and in Colp, Poplar and Oak.

At the entrance of each hallway is a soothing light, simulating clouds. All hallways have matching color schemes of carpet, wall paper, and pictures to distinguish them. There is a soothing effect of carpet and tile in a design simulating a flowing river.

NEW LOGO
Interbrand Design Forum debuted the new logo this summer. Shown at the top of this page in the newly designed masthead for Volunteer Vision, this logo will have variations of the logo in the counties we serve.

Departments are in the process of updating all publications with new logo, color palette, and fonts. Publications have a new look and design in keeping with the brand image.

NEW VOLUNTEER SERVICES WORKROOM, OFFICES
The new Volunteer Services hallway is still under construction with a December 15 completion. The Volunteer Workroom will quadruple in size with work stations for all the packets assembled – Admissions, Patient Handbook, Crisis Care, and Pathways of Hope. More space will be available for making crafts, the kits for nurses, and the hospitality kits. Storage will increase for all the supplies. The Volunteer staff will have expanded offices, one adjacent to the workroom and four across the hall.

CAREER WEAR
As part of the campaign to introduce the new logo, staff are wearing shirts, blouses, polo shirts, sport coats, and jackets with the new logo. Volunteer ambassadors and receptionists will be sporting the new logo on navy jackets.

 

When Families Need it Most

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Dr. Gary LeRoy serves on the Board of Trustees for Hospice of Dayton. As a family practitioner, Dr. LeRoy sees the possibility of enabling a loved one to die at home instead of in a hospital as an act of love, an act of generational devotion. “When a disease diagnosis leaves no hope for cure, hospice services are designed to support quality of life and help the family through the journey of loss,” says Dr. LeRoy. “Hospice of Dayton can help families by providing in-home visits from physicians, nurses, chaplains, social workers, home health aides and volunteers to help meet the needs of patients. Medical equipment such as hospital beds, oxygen and portable toilets can be delivered to the home to help patients continue to remain comfortably at home.”

Medications and supplies for the terminal diagnosis are routinely included in hospice care and the costs are typically covered through insurance, Medicare or Medicaid. “Even patients who are not covered through such programs can receive care from Hospice of Dayton at no cost,” Dr. LeRoy stresses. “As a non-profit hospice provider and thanks to donations from the community, Hospice of Dayton provides care for any eligible patient regardless of ability to pay.

Beyond caring for the patient, hospice services are also geared to go above and beyond in an effort to care for family members. “Grief counseling for family members is also available at no cost and extends for over a year after the loss of a loved one in hospice care. The Pathways of Hope grief counseling program at Hospice of Dayton also offers grief counseling to anyone in the community who needs it, regardless of whether hospice services were ever used.”

Dr. LeRoy is quick to offer clarification about some of the myths about hospice care. “Many people believe hospice care is only for those with cancer. Actually Hospice of Dayton provides care for patients with a variety of diagnoses including heart disease, Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, respiratory diseases, ALS, Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson’s Disease, HIV/AIDS, liver disease, kidney failure, stroke and coma.” Dr. LeRoy also notes that many patients who receive hospice care continue to live and have a high quality of life beyond the six-month life expectancy upon which hospice admission is based. “While physicians refer patients into hospice care when they believe patients are in decline and not expected to survive beyond six months, the reality is that some patients do very well with the concentrated care provided by hospice and can survive for years. Hospice patients who meet eligibility requirements are not bound by time limits and can continue to receive services as needed.” Patients can also continue to see their regular doctor. The caring, patient-focused physicians of Hospice of Dayton serve as specialists and consultants, but do not replace the family doctor as the primary caregiver.

While some hospices require patients to stop all treatments, Hospice of Dayton permits patients to continue to receive chemotherapy, radiation therapy and other treatments designed to ease pain and offer comfort.

Dr. LeRoy recommends that families discuss end-of-life care to assure that individual wishes can be respected and honored. “It’s not an easy conversation, but it’s important for families to know what loved ones want in terms of end-of-life care. Those who love you will want to do everything they can to respect your wishes,” Dr. LeRoy says. “Our family ties are so strong, but sometimes even the strongest family can’t meet every need without help. Hospice of Dayton is a resource that can help when families need it most.”

Decades of Dedication

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Larry Glickler was new to Dayton and only 25 years old when he became the owner of a funeral home and began his passion for Hospice of Dayton. “A representative from Hospice of Dayton came to a meeting of funeral directors and asked for volunteers. I volunteered and I never left.” Thirty years later, Larry is still involved with The Hospice of Dayton as a volunteer with the Hospice of Dayton Foundation Development Committee and Ethics Committee.

He is proud of his decades of dedication to the mission and philosophy of hospice, and proud to be part of the historical legacy of the organization. Larry was a member of the first Board of Directors. As the demand for hospice services grew, so did the realization that some of the patients being served were too sick to remain in their home, but they did not want to be hospitalized and faced with futile, unwanted procedures and treatments. The idea of building a care center to meet the needs of patients came at the same time Larry assumed the role of President of the Board. He introduced the motion to build the care center and helped spearhead the capital campaign to make it a reality.

He credits Carol Cline, whose gift was at the time the single largest donation, for enabling construction of the facility. Larry takes most pride in the fact that The Hospice of Dayton serves everyone equally, regardless of ability to pay, and regardless of cost of care. “We never turn anyone away,” Larry says. “What is most dear to my heart, “ Larry shares, “is how often I’ve talked with families who have had an experience at The Hospice of Dayton and they talk with me about the “angels” at hospice and the wonderful care their loved one received. It makes me proud to be a part of it.”

The Storeyteller’s Story

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Jerry Gump always has stories to share. Sharing is what comes naturally to Jerry. That’s why he became a volunteer for hospice in 2005.

He was just a few years into his retirement after a thirty year career as a Housing Inspector for the City of Middletown when doctors diagnosed his wife of 35 years with small cell lung cancer and gave her three months to live. Jerry says “we knew it was incurable but we fought the good fight. She lived 22 months after diagnosis.” Becoming a hospice volunteer was an easy decision for Jerry. “It was a chance for me to give back,” Jerry says. “Hospice did so much for us. We appreciated the nurses and home health aides that cared for my wife. Hospice helped give her more time and helped us keep her at home.”

Jerry has taken on all kinds of assignments for hospice, but his most frequent role is that of a visitor, sharing stories with patients, helping take them to the grocery, to the doctor or for treatments. He was visiting a patient one Sunday afternoon when the “dry hurricane” hit. As the winds whipped up, Jerry tried to get onto the patio to move furniture so it wouldn’t be damaged, but was unable to open the door because of the air pressure. The glass topped patio table was smashed. When he returned home he found a huge limb from the neighbor’s tree in his driveway. “It fell exactly where my van would have been parked if I’d been home,” Jerry says. “I took it as a sign that I was where I needed to be.”

All of the patients and families whose lives Jerry has touched would agree. As a hospice volunteer, he is exactly where he needs to be.