Call Us Anytime! | 24/7 Service

Green for Compassion

Unfortunately COVID-19 is still in full force, which means more positive cases and unfortunately, more lives lost. If you drive by our office after dark, you’ll see our lobby lit with green lights to honor those lost due to this horrible virus. Green is the color of compassion. We are not only honoring the lives lost, but honoring those who are newly diagnosed or who have beaten this virus. As our Governor says, “We will get through this. We will get through this together.” 💚 Governor Andy Beshear

As of June 3, 2020 the state of Kentucky has tested 258,767 patients with 10,410 positive tests. We have lost 450 people to COVID-19 and 3,283 people have recovered.(https://govstatus.egov.com/kycovid19).


Photo credit- Skylar Mars
h

Read more

What does Hospice Care look like?

What does hospice care look like? Hospice care is a holistic approach to care for the patient; meaning the patient is cared for in every way. Hospice care manages the five types of pain- physical, social, emotional, spiritual, and psychological and surrounds the patient with a team of experts in order to do so. Our interdepartmental team consists of our hospice medical directors, a nurse practitioner, nurses, nurse aides, social workers, chaplains, and volunteers who surround the patient to ensure all of their pain is taken care of.
 
Hospice looks like quality of life! Hospice looks like our Lucy Smith King Care Center, education, bereavement, volunteer work, hands-on nursing care, home, nurse aide care, spiritual care, and much more.
 
With COVID-19 still very much present, St. Anthony’s is still taking precautions by screening all employees and potential patients/families, wearing masks when outside of our individual offices, regularly disinfecting surfaces, hand washing and sanitizing, social distancing, and wearing masks when around patients and potential patients.
 
Share with us, what does hospice care look like to you? As always, if there is anything we can do to help you or a loved one please call us at (270) 826-2326 anytime!
Read more

Our Loss is Another’s Reunion

Losing a loved one can be incredibly painful and life-changing. The person you are used to seeing and talking to, is suddenly gone. How do you deal with the grief you have? Are you questioning why this happened? 

At St. Anthony’s Hospice we offer free bereavement services to help you understand this influx of emotions. We offer those services to patient’s family and friends for 15 months after the patient has passed away. Other than the services for patient’s family and friends, we bereavement services are open to anyone who has experienced loss! Grief groups, grief counseling, and other services are offered to any person in the community. 

If you are struggling with loss of a loved one, call us at (270) 826-2326 to learn more about it.

Read more

5 Tips for Managing Grief and Fear with Coronavirus

One of our Chaplains, Thomas Emerson, forwarded an amazing article to all of us once the Coronavirus pandemic began. We wanted to share this on our website for all to see! In this crazy time, these grief tips can apply to any difficult situation that may arise.

“The world is different. Life has changed.

The coronavirus struck silently and quickly. The ripple effects began immediately and morphed into the current tsunami that we are now trying to manage. Every day, we wake up to a different scenario. The speed of it all is overwhelming.

This unseen threat can catapult our hearts into anxiety and terror. No matter how you stack it, the current world health crisis adds up to loss for all of us.

Loss of perceived control.

Financial loss.

Loss of a sense of safety and security.

Loss of routine and daily life as we knew it.

Loss, loss, and more loss. We can feel small, overwhelmed, and outmatched.

Our hearts are our most prized possession. Our hearts are the guts of who we are. Now, more than ever, we need to guard our hearts from outside threats and dangers. How we think about this current and unforeseen challenge matters more than any of us realizes.

5 Crucial Tips for Managing this Crisis

Here are five tips for guarding your heart and your emotional well-being during this current crisis.

Practice breathing deeply.
Deep breathing (in through your nose and out through your mouth) is the easiest and most immediate weapon in your arsenal to battle uncertainty, fear, and anxiety.

In terms of emotional infection control, deep breathing is similar to washing your hands. In order to be effective, it must be practiced regularly. We must make it a habit.

Start and end your day by taking a few moments to breathe deeply. Imagine yourself breathing in peace and then exhaling fear, worry, and distress. When you find yourself fearful or anxious during the day, take a moment to breathe (again, in through the nose and out through the mouth). Picture yourself in a safe place. Peace in. Fear and anxiety out.

2. Respond rather than react.

With each new bit of news, our minds race and our hearts react. We have “emotional reflexes” that are immediate and powerful.

Rather than being hijacked by this initial flood of thoughts and feelings, take a moment, breathe deeply, and let these thoughts and feelings pass on through. Acknowledge them and then release them.

Now, rather than reacting and being at the whim of whatever happens next, you can choose how you are personally going to respond.

It’s easy to get derailed and spend all our time watching the latest updates. Knowledge and awareness are huge, but there comes a tipping point for each of us when more information ceases to be helpful. We can become obsessed with things beyond our control, which only stokes our anxiety and inflames our fears.

We all have things to do. Focus on them, one by one. Work. Cleaning. Laundry. Relationships. Pets. Stay in the present. One thing, one moment at a time.

3. Act for the greater good.

What does this look like?

It means following the guidelines laid down for us by our health experts and elected officials. There are people out there working around the clock to protect us and see us through this. We can stand with them against this virus by courageously and humbly acting for the greater good – even if it’s personally uncomfortable and costly.

We might be divided politically, but now is a time when we must come together. No matter what we might think about who is in office and where, if each of us acts for the greater good – thinking about those around us – we will get through this better overall.

Just as in all of life, we must confront our own arrogance (“It’s all about me and what I think and want”) and pursue humility and love (“It’s about all of us because we’re in this together”).

4. Do and say things that promote peace.

With activities restricted and our routines in tatters, it’s easy to spew our discontent and frustration on social media and in other ways. Though each of us needs to take what’s happening inside us seriously, now is a time to constrain what we want to say in favor of speaking for the greater good.

We all need places to vent. Please make sure you have some avenues where you can “let it out” without fear of judgment. Venting publicly online, however, will most likely not serve you or anyone else well.

Our words have power. Now is the time to think of each other first and speak words that are helpful and that promote peace.

Yes, this is hard. Yes, we can do this.

5. Keep your eyes on the bigger picture.

Life is about relationships. Isolation is painful and debilitating. In our world, thankfully we have multiple ways to stay connected, even if we can’t be physically present.

Life is about love and service. Life is about living for the good of those around us. Love involves sacrifice. It’s a bit ironic. In order to live from our hearts and love others, we must “get out of our own heads.”

It can feel like life is shrinking. Don’t let circumstances shrink your heart. Find ways to live with purpose and meaning, even if you’re confined and restricted.

Keep your eyes on the larger story. Refuse to shrink. You are more important than you know.

Remember that love always wins.

If we put the above into a set of affirmations, it would be something like this:

I will practice breathing deeply.

I will respond rather than react.

I will act for the greater good.

I will do and say things that promote peace.

I will keep my eyes on the bigger picture.

We will get through this – together. It’s going to take all of us. We need you.

Love will win. It always does.

Question: Has the coronavirus situation affected your emotional well-being or grief process? How so?”

If you or a loved one is in need of bereavement counseling, hospice care, or palliative care, please call us at (270) 826-2326.

Source: https://www.garyroe.com/…/5-tips-grief-fear-and-coronavirus/

Read more

Prevent Catching & Spreading Coronavirus

Since life is beginning to return to a new normal, we wanted to share a little graphic to help keep you safe from Coronavirus. This graphic highlights the ways one can prevent catching and prevent spreading Coronavirus.

Coronavirus is thought to spread mainly from person-to-person contact. This means that the virus spreads between people who are in close contact to one another (within 6ft), through respiratory droplets that are produced when an infected person coughs, sneezes, or talks, and the virus can spread even when the carrier is asymptomatic. The number one way to prevent spreading the virus is to not catch it. However, this is rather difficult when an infected person may not show symptoms usually 2-14 days after exposure. Be on the lookout if symptoms develop. The main symptoms of Coronavirus include a fever over 101°F, dry cough, shortness or breath, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, new loss of taste or smell, sore throat, congestion or runny nose, nausea or vomiting, or diarrhea.

Please wash your hands for at least 20 seconds, wear a cloth mask when in public to contain your personal droplets, cover your coughs and sneezes, and keep practicing social distancing!

Source listed on graphic. Information about Coronavirus is from cdc.gov.

Read more

Why St. Anthony’s- Brittany Major

We are adding another Why St. Anthony’s story to our website. Today we are revisiting the story from Brittany Major, who was kind enough to share the story of her great grandmother, Bea Chandler. Brittany was kind enough to provide the photos in the post.

“March 15th, 2013 was a day everything changed. My great grandmother, Bea, fell at home while I was taking my grandmother to get groceries. Mammaw was 92 and very self-sufficient to be her age. She lived with my grandmother. I received a phone call coming home from the store that she had fallen. Once we got her to the hospital in Madisonville, she was life-flighted to St. Mary’s STICU with a broken C1-3. She was not a surgical candidate and was then sent to do therapy in Madisonville. March 23 she was sent to the Lucy Smith King Care Center after we found out she could no longer swallow and was aspirating every time she tried. The nurses and staff there made her feel welcome. They made her comfortable. They made us feel comfortable. March 27th at 5:02pm my world stopped. My grandmother, my aunts, and I were in the room when I noticed she wasn’t breathing. The nurse came in and listened for a heart beat and then said “Ladies, I am so sorry but she is gone.” If the nurse aide wasn’t standing behind me, I would have been on the floor. She caught me and let me lay back on her and cry. She held me tight and let me grieve. The staff took such wonderful care of her. I couldn’t have asked to have better, more caring people taking care of her in her last few days on earth. I’ll forever be thankful for the Lucy Smith King Center.”

If you have a loved one who is struggling and could benefit from some extra help, please call us to see what we can do for you (270) 826-2326.

Read more

Hospice Myths- part 1

We wanted to tackle some hospice myths today!

“Hospices must be sad places.” Well hospice isn’t a place, it is a service. Hospice is a healthcare service provided wherever the patient calls home- a house, apartment, assisted living facility, nursing home, or our Lucy Smith King Care Center. Sometimes the service of hospice can be sad due to losing a loved one, but knowing that your loved one was physically, emotionally, and spiritually comfortable the entire time helps you know your loved one is well-cared for. Also, bereavement services are offered to the family to help through the grief process.

“Hospices only provide medical care.” While hospice care IS a healthcare service, we are not only a medical service. St. Anthony’s Hospice care offers expert medical care, emotional support for the patient and family, spiritual support, help with everyday activities, companionship, medication management, durable medical equipment, and medical supplies.

“Working at a hospice must be depressing.” If you go back in our timeline, our amazing Lucy Smith King Care Center Administrative Assistant, Amy Hanley said it best! Amy said “St. Anthony’s Hospice is about so much more than the sadness, sickness, death, and dying… I get to work in a place that is filled with so much compassion, selflessness, kindness, and love everyday.” Hospice workers do see the hardest times, but it is such an amazing feeling to be there for those who are struggling and those who are dying. We love caring for our patients and their families!

If you have any questions or would like to refer your loved one to St. Anthony’s care, please call us at (270) 826-2326 or visit our website at https://stanthonyshospice.org/referral/.

Read more

10 Signs its Time for Hospice

One of the most common hospice myths is “hospice should only be called in the last moments of life.” When in reality, the earlier hospice care is used, the more benefits that the patient and family receive. Hospice care can be called in once a terminal diagnosis has been given and the life expectancy (should the disease run it’s normal course) is 6 months or less. Pain and symptom management is more effective when delivered earlier in the disease process.

It is time to call hospice if your loved one is experiencing any of the symptoms below:

  • Repeat visits to the emergency room or hospital admissions
  • A decline in ability to perform daily tasks including but not limited to, eating, getting dressed, walking, or using the bathroom
  • An increase in falls
  • Changes to their mental abilities
  • Rapid weight loss without trying
  • Skin tears, infections, and other signs of deteriorating health

Your physician does not have to make the hospice referral! You or a loved one must be diagnosed with a terminal illness with six months or less to live, should the disease run its usual course. This does not mean that you or a loved one will die within the 6 month time frame- some patients live more than 6 months and some can even get better and get discharged from hospice care!

The number one complaint we hear from families is they wish they had called St. Anthony’s sooner!

If you or a loved one is experiencing any of the 10 signs in the picture or the few above, call St. Anthony’s to see what we can do to help (270) 826-2326.

Read more

Faces of St. Anthony’s Hospice

Today, we wanted to feature our AMAZING volunteers and staff! Our volunteers have been working behind the scenes during this pandemic to protect our clinicians & patients and to add some TLC to our benches at the Lucy Smith King Care Center! We couldn’t do what we do without such an integral part of the St. Anthony’s Hospice family. As of April 8th, our volunteers have made a whopping 458 masks! These masks have been divided between our business office, Lucy Smith King Care Center, and Redbanks Colonial Terrace! A special thank you to our volunteers, the unsung heroes

This post features some of the clinical faces you see caring for patients and our volunteers making the masks.

 

Read more

Cloth Face Coverings & Masks

Many people are following the CDC recommendations when it comes to wearing cloth face masks and face coverings. The cloth masks are intended for the person wearing it to keep their germs to his or herself, not protection for the wearer. With the new data on how COVID-19 spreads, the CDC is recommending that people wear a cloth face mask or cloth face covering when out in public, especially when one might be in close proximity to another person. The CDC still recommends that we stay at least 6 ft from another person when in public. The face masks and coverings are not a substitute for social distancing; rather they are a small way to keep more of your germs to yourself. Since COVID-19 can be asymptomatic for 2-14 days, it is important to take all precautions to protect yourself and others from this virus (social distancing for you, masks for others). The CDC recommends all persons wear a cloth mask or face covering except those younger than age 2, anyone who typically has trouble breathing, an unconscious person, or a person who is unable to remove the mask without assistance.

Please note that the face masks are a recommendation intended to prevent the spread of the virus by keeping your germs to yourself. 

Also please note that surgical masks and N95 respirator masks are not being recommended for general public use. These masks are in short supply and are needed by those in the medical setting and first responders.

Please take a couple of minutes and read this pdf from the CDC on how to properly wear the masks to maximize effectiveness: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/downloads/DIY-cloth-face-covering-instructions.pdf

 

All information in this post is from the CDC website: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prevent-getting-sick/diy-cloth-face-coverings.html and https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prevent-getting-sick/cloth-face-cover-faq.html

Read more