Proclamation 5903 --
National Hospice Month, 1988
By
the President of the
A
Proclamation
Hospice
care helps terminally ill people cope physically and emotionally with illness
and helps their families cope with grief. To achieve these goals, hospices
offer an intimate approach for both patient and family that encompasses
medical care, relief from pain, and encouragement to continue in loving family
relationships. Observance of National Hospice Month, 1988, provides Americans
with the chance to learn more about hospice care and its purposes.
Hospices
offer compassionate, planned care by interdisciplinary teams of doctors,
nurses, therapists, home health aides, homemakers, volunteers, social workers,
and pastoral and other counselors. All of these people see to the varied needs
of patients and families. At present, small hospices, staffed largely by
volunteers, are supplying much of the care to those in need, often without
charge. But hospice care is increasingly a part of health care in
During
this special month of observance and in the future, we can all be aware that
hospices make it possible for terminally ill people to have a natural death in
the comforting knowledge that their loved ones will not face their loss
unprepared or alone. We can be grateful for the reverence thus shown for the sanctity
of life and human dignity.
The
Congress, by Public Law 100 - 405, has designated November 1988 as ``National
Hospice Month'' and authorized and requested the President to issue a
proclamation in observance of this month.
Now,
Therefore, I, Ronald Reagan, President of the
In
Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this sixth day of November, in the
year of our Lord nineteen hundred and eighty-eight, and of the
Ronald
Reagan
[Filed with the Office
of the Federal Register,
Note: The proclamation
was released by the Office of the Press Secretary on November 7.