Introduction
This guide is designed to help you clearly
understand three important types of care services available today: Hospice, Non-Skilled Care, and Home Health Services. Whether you are a family member seeking care
for a loved one, a healthcare professional, or a business owner in the care
industry, knowing the distinctions between these services is essential for
making informed decisions. Each section of this document will guide you
step-by-step through each type of service so you can confidently identify which
is best for your needs.
First,
we will look at Hospice Care, which focuses on providing
comfort, dignity, and quality of life for individuals facing terminal
illnesses. This section will explain how hospice emphasizes pain management,
emotional and spiritual support, and compassionate guidance for both patients and
families during the final stages of life.
Next, we
will explore Non-Skilled Care, sometimes called personal
or companion care. Here, you will learn how this service provides essential
day-to-day assistance—such as bathing, dressing, meal preparation,
transportation, and companionship—helping individuals maintain independence
while getting support for everyday living.
After
that, we will examine Home Health Services, which bring skilled medical care into the
home. This section will outline how services like nursing care, physical
therapy, and occupational therapy are delivered by licensed professionals to
aid recovery, manage conditions, and promote safe healing in a familiar
environment.
Finally,
we will highlight the key benefits of these services, including improved quality of life,
personalized and compassionate care, fewer hospital stays, stronger emotional
well-being, and the opportunity for individuals to remain in their own homes
while receiving professional support. By the end, you will have a clear,
structured understanding of how each service works and when it is most
appropriate.
What Is Hospice Care?

Hospice
care is a type of healthcare focused entirely on comfort and quality of life
for individuals with terminal illnesses and a prognosis of six months or less
if the disease follows its expected course. The primary goal is to relieve pain
and symptoms—not to cure the illness—and to provide emotional, spiritual, and
psychosocial support.
Hospice
care, as described by Signal Health Group, is a specialized service focused
entirely on comfort and quality of life for individuals in the final stages of
a terminal illness, typically with a prognosis of six months or less if the
disease follows its expected course. The primary goal is to manage pain,
control symptoms, and provide comprehensive emotional, spiritual, and
psychosocial support—helping both patients and their families navigate this
stage with dignity and compassion. Hospice services are delivered wherever the
patient resides—whether at home, in a nursing facility, assisted living center,
or hospital—by an interdisciplinary team that may include physicians, nurses,
social workers, hospice aides, and chaplains. These services often involve
symptom management, medical equipment and supplies, counseling, and bereavement
support for families for up to 13 months after a loved one’s passing. Unlike
curative care, hospice does not aim to cure illness or prolong life through
aggressive treatment; instead, it centers on enhancing comfort and preserving
the patient’s dignity during life’s final chapter.
Setting
& Team Composition: Hospice care is delivered where the patient lives—home,
nursing facility, assisted-living center, or hospital. Care is
interdisciplinary, involving physicians, nurses, social workers, hospice aides,
and chaplains.
Services
Provided: Symptom and pain management, medical equipment and supplies,
emotional and spiritual support, and family bereavement support for up to 13
months after the patient’s death.
What
Hospice Is Not: It does not pursue curative treatments or hasten death, but
focuses on comfort and dignity.
What Are Home Health Services?

Home
health services encompass a range of skilled medical services delivered at home
to treat illness, injury, or support recovery—typically ordered by a doctor.
These services are part-time or intermittent and often covered by insurance
when patients are homebound.
Home health services, as recognized by Signal
Health Group, provide skilled medical care in the comfort of a patient’s home,
making it an ideal option for those recovering from illness, surgery, or
injury, or managing chronic health conditions. These services are usually
prescribed by a physician and are often covered by Medicare, Medicaid, or
private insurance when the patient meets homebound criteria. By bringing
professional healthcare into the home, patients can avoid extended hospital
stays, reduce the risk of infection, and heal in a familiar, supportive
setting.
Care is delivered by a coordinated team that
may include registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, physical therapists,
occupational therapists, speech-language pathologists, and medical social
workers, with home health aides providing personal assistance under
professional supervision. Services often include skilled nursing for wound
care, IV therapy, medication administration, and disease monitoring;
rehabilitative therapies to restore mobility, strength, and speech; and patient
and family education to support self-care.
In addition to treatment, home health services
emphasize preventive care—helping patients manage chronic illnesses like
diabetes, heart disease, or COPD to avoid unnecessary hospital readmissions.
The care plan is individualized, regularly reviewed, and adjusted based on
progress, ensuring it aligns with the patient’s health goals and personal
preferences.
Ultimately, the goals of home health services
extend beyond medical treatment. They aim to promote faster recovery, maintain
independence, improve quality of life, and provide peace of mind for
families—knowing their loved one is receiving professional, compassionate care
without leaving home.
Examples
of Services: Skilled nursing (wound care, IV therapy, medication management),
rehabilitation therapies (physical, occupational, speech), medical social
services, and home health aides under professional supervision.
Goals:
Recovery, independence, managing chronic conditions, and preventing decline.
What Is Non‑Skilled (Unskilled) Care?

Non-skilled care—often called personal care,
companion care, or unskilled care—is a non-medical service designed to help
individuals remain safe, comfortable, and independent in their own homes.
Provided by caregivers who do not hold a medical license, these services focus
on supporting daily living needs rather than delivering medical treatment.
Typical assistance includes help with activities of daily living (ADLs) such as
bathing, dressing, grooming, and toileting, as well as instrumental tasks like meal
preparation, light housekeeping, laundry, running errands, providing
transportation, and offering companionship to reduce social isolation.
Caregivers may also give medication reminders, assist with mobility, prevent
falls, and keep an eye on the overall well-being of the person in their care.
Unlike home health care—which requires
licensed professionals to perform skilled medical tasks—non-skilled care
centers on the personal, practical, and social aspects of support. It is often
arranged and paid for privately by families, though some individuals may use
long-term care insurance, veterans’ benefits, or certain state and community
programs to offset costs. Because non-skilled caregivers are generally
unlicensed and have no formal medical training, their focus is on maintaining
quality of life rather than providing direct healthcare.
When integrated into a broader care plan,
non-skilled care can play a vital role in preventing unnecessary
hospitalizations, easing the burden on family caregivers, and ensuring that
individuals can remain in familiar surroundings while receiving the help they
need day-to-day. This makes it an essential complement to hospice or home
health services when ongoing, non-medical support is required.
Typical
Services Include: Assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs) such as
bathing, dressing, grooming, toileting, meal prep, light housekeeping, errands,
companionship, transportation, medication reminders, fall prevention, and
monitoring status.
How It
Differs: Non‑skilled care handles daily life tasks and is
often paid privately or through long-term care insurance. Home health involves
licensed professionals performing medical procedures.
Licensing
& Coverage: Non‑skilled caregivers are generally unlicensed
and lack formal medical training. Coverage is limited; many services are
out-of-pocket or through long-term care insurance.
Comparison
Table
Service
Type
|
Purpose
|
Providers
Involved
|
Typical
Coverage
|
Hospice
|
Comfort
& quality end-of-life
|
Multidisciplinary
team (medical & support)
|
Medicare,
Medicaid, insurance
|
Home
Health
|
Medical
care at home (skilled)
|
Licensed
nurses, therapists, aides
|
Medicare,
doctor-ordered
|
Non‑Skilled
Care
|
Daily
living support
|
Unlicensed
caregivers/aides
|
Private
pay or LTC insurance
|
Summary of Services – Signal Health Group
Hospice Care
Hospice care provides expert medical services, emotional support, and spiritual
resources tailored to individuals in the final stages of a terminal illness,
with a focus on comfort rather than cure. Delivered where the patient calls
home, care is orchestrated by a team that includes nurses, social workers,
counselors, spiritual caregivers, volunteers, therapists, and more. This team
collaborates to create individualized plans addressing pain and symptom
management, emotional and spiritual well-being, advance-care decisions, and
bereavement support. Staff are available 24/7 to support both patient and
family with dignity and compassion.
Home Health (Skilled) Services
Signal Health Group delivers physician-ordered, hospital-level care in the
comfort of your home through their skilled care services. These include skilled
nursing, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, and medical
social services. Medicare, Medicaid, private insurance, VA benefits, or private
pay can cover these services, subject to eligibility—particularly if the
patient meets the homebound criteria.
Non-Skilled (Personal) Care
Also referred to as personal or companion care, these services help with daily
living tasks such as bathing, dressing, grooming, meal prep, light
housekeeping, errands, and companionship. Signal Health Group further expands
this category to include homemaking services such as laundry, pet care, and
plant care; Alzheimer’s and dementia support; wound assistance; sleepover care;
and general wellness-focused activities.

About Our Founder
Hahn March
Hahn March founded Signal Health Group with a vision to provide compassionate,
reliable, and comprehensive care services that honor the dignity of every
client. With a deep passion for improving lives, Hahn has built a team
dedicated to delivering exceptional hospice, home health, and personal care
services across communities nationwide.
A Note from Hahn March
“When I started Signal Health Group, my mission was simple: to make
quality care accessible and personal. I believe that care is more than a
service—it’s a relationship built on trust, respect, and understanding. Every
client we serve becomes part of the Signal family, and it’s our privilege to
walk alongside them in their unique journey. Thank you for allowing us to be a
part of your care story.”
Suggested
Resources
https://signalhg.com/