3
Medicare-certified hospices
0
Non-profit
3
For-profit
0
With Medicare star rating
3
With listed website

All hospices in Westminster

24/7 Care At Home - Hospice

☆☆☆☆☆Not rated
Westminster, CA · For-Profit
8291 Westminster Blvd, Suite 250b · 92683
4.9(94 reviews) · view on Google →
★★★★★“Iam writing this review, first I would like to thanks Tam Tran from 24/7, She was the best, she has help my family alot to go through a very…”— Nilson Tran · 5 months ago

Compassionate Health Hospice

☆☆☆☆☆Not rated
Westminster, CA · For-Profit
7838 Westminster Blvd. · 92683

Maxcare Hospice

☆☆☆☆☆Not rated
Family caregiver scores — from the Medicare CAHPS survey
  1. Would definitely recommend74%
  2. Rated hospice 9 or 10 out of 1074%
  3. Pain & symptoms always managed64%
  4. Team always communicated well69%
  5. Always treated with respect80%
  6. Help arrived in a timely way60%
  7. Right amount of emotional support81%
Westminster, CA · For-Profit
13800 Arizona Street, Suite 201 · 92683
4.9(44 reviews) · view on Google →
★★★★★“I wanted to take a moment to express my deepest gratitude for the exceptional care and support you provided to my grandmother and our entire family…”— Ivy Nguyen · 2 months ago
Choosing care

How to choose a hospice in Orange County.

Picking the right hospice is one of the harder decisions families make, often under time pressure. A few things to weigh as you compare providers in this directory:

01

Confirm Medicare certification.

Every hospice on this page holds a current CMS Certification Number (CCN). That ensures they bill under the Medicare hospice benefit and meet federal Conditions of Participation. Always verify the CCN if you're researching outside this directory.

02

Check the Medicare star rating in context.

The CMS CAHPS Hospice Survey rating reflects how family caregivers rated their experience — communication, timeliness, pain management, emotional support. A higher rating is a good signal, but smaller hospices often show Not rated just because they don't have enough survey responses, not because care is worse.

03

Ask about 24/7 availability and visit frequency.

Hospice care is more than nurse visits — it's a promise that someone is reachable when symptoms escalate at 2 a.m. Ask how the on-call nurse triage works, who comes after hours, and how often visits are scheduled at the patient's stage of care.

04

Find out where they can deliver care.

Most hospices serve patients at home, in assisted-living, and in skilled-nursing facilities. Some have their own inpatient units for general inpatient (GIP) care when symptoms can't be controlled at home. Ask what's available and what's contracted.

05

Listen to how they talk about the family.

Good hospice teams treat the family as part of the unit of care. Look for explicit offerings around caregiver support, respite care, social work, chaplaincy, and 13 months of bereavement support after the patient's death — those are Medicare-required components, but how they're delivered varies a lot in practice.

06

Cross-check the reviews you read.

Google reviews are useful colour but unverified — they can be left by anyone. The Medicare CAHPS rating is from validated family caregiver surveys with standardized questions. Both have value; weigh them together rather than picking one.

Frequently asked questions

Hospice care, plain answers.

Does Medicare cover hospice care?

Yes. Medicare Part A covers the full cost of hospice care for eligible patients — doctor and nursing services, medical equipment, medications related to the terminal illness, short-term inpatient care, respite care for family caregivers, and bereavement support for the family. There is typically no out-of-pocket cost to the patient apart from small copays on outpatient drugs (capped at $5) and respite stays.

Who is eligible for hospice?

A patient becomes eligible for hospice when two physicians — the attending physician and the hospice medical director — certify a life expectancy of six months or less if the illness runs its normal course. The patient must also choose to focus on comfort care rather than curative treatment for the terminal illness.

How long can someone stay in hospice?

There is no fixed limit. Medicare hospice benefits are split into an initial 90-day period, a second 90-day period, and then unlimited 60-day periods, each with a face-to-face recertification by the hospice team. Patients who improve can be discharged and re-enrolled later if their condition declines again.

Where is hospice care provided?

Most hospice care happens wherever the patient calls home — a private residence, an assisted-living community, a skilled nursing facility, or a hospice's own inpatient unit. Care is brought to the patient by an interdisciplinary team that includes nurses, physicians, social workers, chaplains, aides, and volunteers.

Who refers a patient to hospice?

Anyone can initiate a hospice referral — a physician, a discharge planner, a family member, or the patient themselves. A hospice nurse will do an evaluation visit; the attending physician and hospice medical director then formally certify eligibility.

What's the difference between hospice and palliative care?

Palliative care is symptom-focused supportive care that can begin at any stage of a serious illness, alongside curative treatment. Hospice is a specific Medicare benefit for patients in the final phase of life who are no longer pursuing curative care. Both share the same focus on comfort, dignity, and family support — hospice is one form of palliative care.

What questions should I ask when choosing a hospice?

Useful questions: How quickly can you start care after admission? Is a nurse available 24/7 by phone, and who comes after hours? What is the average caseload per nurse? How will pain and symptoms be managed in the first 48 hours? What support do you offer the family? Do you have inpatient beds for general inpatient (GIP) care? What is your Medicare CAHPS rating and what does it reflect?

Is the hospice on this directory affiliated with chionline.org?

No. This is an independent directory. We don't accept payment from hospices to be listed, to rank higher, or to suppress reviews. Listings are pulled from the CMS Provider Data Catalog (Hospice General Information and the CAHPS Hospice Survey) and the Google Places API. If you find a factual error, please contact us.

More in Orange County

Other cities & the full county directory

← Back to Orange County

See every Medicare-certified hospice in Orange County.

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Anaheim

Hospices in Anaheim, Orange County.

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Brea

Hospices in Brea, Orange County.

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Buena Park

Hospices in Buena Park, Orange County.

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Costa Mesa

Hospices in Costa Mesa, Orange County.

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Fountain Valley

Hospices in Fountain Valley, Orange County.

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Fullerton

Hospices in Fullerton, Orange County.

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Garden Grove

Hospices in Garden Grove, Orange County.

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Huntington Beach

Hospices in Huntington Beach, Orange County.

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Irvine

Hospices in Irvine, Orange County.

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La Habra

Hospices in La Habra, Orange County.

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La Palma

Hospices in La Palma, Orange County.

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Laguna Beach

Hospices in Laguna Beach, Orange County.

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Laguna Hills

Hospices in Laguna Hills, Orange County.

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Lake Forest

Hospices in Lake Forest, Orange County.

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Los Alamitos

Hospices in Los Alamitos, Orange County.

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Mission Viejo

Hospices in Mission Viejo, Orange County.

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Newport Beach

Hospices in Newport Beach, Orange County.

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Orange

Hospices in Orange, Orange County.

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Placentia

Hospices in Placentia, Orange County.

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San Juan Capistrano

Hospices in San Juan Capistrano, Orange County.

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Santa Ana

Hospices in Santa Ana, Orange County.

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Seal Beach

Hospices in Seal Beach, Orange County.

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Stanton

Hospices in Stanton, Orange County.

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Thousand Oaks

Hospices in Thousand Oaks, Orange County.

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Tustin

Hospices in Tustin, Orange County.

View Tustin →

Medicare CAHPS Hospice Survey

A federal survey of family caregivers conducted by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). Caregivers answer standardized questions about the quality of care their loved one received — communication, symptom management, emotional support, timeliness, and overall recommendation.

Results are aggregated into a 1–5 star rating that's comparable across U.S. hospices. Only hospices with enough survey responses get a published rating; the rest show Not rated.

Source: medicare.gov/care-compare

Google Maps reviews

General-purpose star reviews left by anyone with a Google account — patients, family members, staff, even competitors. There's no standardized methodology, no verification, and no comparable scoring across providers.

It can still be useful as one signal among many — but it measures something different from the Medicare CAHPS rating shown next to the hospice name. The two numbers can disagree without either being wrong.

Side-by-side comparison