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Have you ever wondered how Good Samaritan Hospice is
funded? While a portion of our services are
reimbursed from insurance, Medicare and Medicaid,
these funds are not sufficient to provide the level
and scope of services our families and communities
need. The funding we receive from insurance and
Medicare is reimbursed at a daily rate, which
often does not cover all the expenditures required
for the patient and his or her family.
Two
significant areas of service that are not reimbursed
are bereavement and community education. Bereavement
support is provided for hospice families for a
minimum of one year following their loved one’s
death. In addition, Good Samaritan staff members are
actively involved in the community as advocates and
educators for end-of-life issues.
For these reasons, we, as the only community-based,
nonprofit hospice in Roanoke Valley, Smith Mountain
Lake and New River Valley, must solicit the support
of our community to assist with our standard program
of care and education. Any expansion of services to
the community at large will require additional gifts
of time, talents and funds.
You can help Good Samaritan Hospice to continue
providing services to our community in the following
ways:
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Volunteering
- Volunteers are the very heart of hospice. Your
gift of your time and/or talents will be a
wonderful gift to a terminally ill patient and
his or her family.
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Making a Monetary Donation
- As a nonprofit, Good Samaritan relies on
gifts from our community members to allow us to
continue to provide non-reimbursable services
such as bereavement care, community support
groups and children's grief support services.
Click here to donate today!
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Gifts in Kind
- Gifts such as office supplies, children's toys
and craft items and nonperishable foods are
always needed!
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Remembering Good Sam in
Your Will
- Your gift to Good Samaritan will provide for
indigent patients for years to come.
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On
Volunteering... |
"Being
a hospice volunteer is very special and
unique...
the genuine spirit of love and concern
shared between my patient and me is a gift.”
A GSH Volunteer |
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