We Bring the Calm

At The Willows Hospice, we are focused on listening to our clients, delivering comprehensive care tailored to your wishes and needs, and serving our patients and families.

Why Choose The Willows Hospice

Comfort

Our skilled care team will focus on understanding you and your condition to ensure we are managing the symptoms that often can be distressing for patients and families. At The Willows we also understand the value of ensuring emotional and spiritual support for our patients and their families is vital to achieving comfort as well. Finally, many patients and families are also comforted that we will continue to provide bereavement support for those who now continue on in their life’s journey trying to find a “new normal.”

Clarity

At the Willows, we bring clarity by ensuring that our patients and families have the opportunity to get answers to many of the complex questions that come with life limiting illnesses. Often we will “hear the bad news” and seem to emotionally or even mentally “shut down” and miss important information that leaves us confused and unsure if hospice is the right decision. Our team will gently walk you through the phases of not only, how we got here but and ensure that you understand what to expect and how we will work together to ensure your loved one gets the best quality of life for their final chapters.

Connection

At The Willows, we understand that illness can make us feel alone and isolated from even those we love. Hobbies seem a thing of the past and morning coffee with friends becomes less frequent or we feel defined by what we are going through. You are not alone. Our team is here to not only walk beside you through this difficult time, but also to allow you to give voice to the pain and loneliness you may be experiencing. We also know that patients and families also long for some of the “normal” things they did before. Our volunteers are wonderfully trained to step in and talk about the weather, play a game of cards, enjoy bird watching, gardening, praying, listening to music, etc. They are there to allow patients to “escape” the loneliness and allow their caregivers to have short periods of time to get groceries, get their own hair done, go for a walk, or even spend some time with a friend.  We understand the value of connection and not feeling alone in such a difficult time.