You are trying to figure out if it is time for hospice in Colorado, and you feel torn. You want comfort and dignity for someone you love, yet you are afraid of choosing hospice too soon or waiting until the last days. gnosis, common qualifying diagnoses, and what to do next in your county.
Hospice is designed for people with a life-limiting illness when the focus shifts to comfort and quality of life. In Colorado, eligibility follows federal Medicare rules and is supported by state guidance.
This guide names the criteria in clear terms, explains how prognosis is determined, lists common diagnoses that qualify, and shows you how to take the next step with clear guidance..
Who Is Eligible For Hospice In Colorado

To qualify for the Medicare hospice benefit, you must meet all of the following:
- A physician and the hospice medical director certify that your life expectancy is six months or less if the illness runs its normal course.
- You choose palliative care rather than treatment that aims to cure your terminal diagnosis.
- You receive care from a Medicare-certified hospice.
These federal rules also guide most commercial plans and Colorado Medicaid (Health First Colorado.
Colorado recognizes hospice as a coordinated set of services available 24 hours a day wherever you live, including a private residence, assisted living, nursing facility, or a licensed inpatient hospice setting.
How Prognosis and Recertification Work
- Initial Benefit Periods: Two 90-day periods followed by unlimited 60-day periods as long as you continue to meet eligibility.
- Face-To-Face Visit: Starting with the third benefit period, a hospice physician or nurse practitioner must complete a face-to-face visit to document why the prognosis remains six months or less.
- If You Stabilize Or Improve: You can graduate from hospice if you no longer meet criteria, and you can return later if your condition changes.
These rules come from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Do You Have to Stop All Treatment
Hospice focuses on comfort for your terminal diagnosis, but you can still receive treatments for unrelated conditions. For example, someone on hospice for advanced heart failure might still receive antibiotics for a urinary infection if that aligns with their goals. Your hospice team will help you decide what best supports comfort and quality of life.
Common Diagnoses That Often Qualify
People qualify for hospice based on prognosis, not diagnosis alone. That said, these conditions frequently meet criteria when the illness is advanced:
- Cancer with progressive disease despite therapy or when additional disease-directed treatment is no longer desired.
- Heart Disease such as advanced congestive heart failure.
- Lung Disease such as severe COPD or pulmonary fibrosis with low oxygen levels and frequent exacerbations.
- Dementia And Alzheimer’s Disease when function declines to late stages.
- Neurologic Conditions like ALS, Parkinson’s disease with complications, or after a severe stroke.
- Renal Or Liver Disease when dialysis or transplant is not an option or no longer consistent with goals.
Functional Tools Your Team May Use
Clinicians often use functional scales to support the prognosis:
- Palliative Performance Scale (PPS): Looks at ambulation, activity, self-care, intake, and level of consciousness. Lower scores reflect greater decline.
- FAST Scale For Dementia: Hospice is often appropriate at FAST stage 7 and beyond, especially with complications like weight loss, infections, or difficulty swallowing.
These tools do not replace clinical judgment. They help paint a clearer picture of how the illness affects day-to-day life.
Colorado Medicaid and Private Insurance
- Health First Colorado (Medicaid): Covers hospice for eligible members. Providers must be enrolled with the state, and the benefit follows federal hospice rules on certification and medical necessity.
- Private Insurance: Many plans mirror Medicare hospice eligibility, though co-pays or specific authorizations can vary by policy.
If you have questions, our admissions team can help verify benefits.
Signs It May Be Time to Ask About Hospice
If you recognize several of these, it is reasonable to ask for a hospice evaluation:
- Multiple hospitalizations or ER visits in the last few months
- Noticeable weight loss or reduced appetite
- Spending most of the day resting or in bed
- Increased shortness of breath, pain, or symptoms despite treatment
- Needing more help with bathing, dressing, or walking
- Advanced dementia with frequent infections or swallowing problems
Our resources are available for more comprehensive insights. Read our guide: When To Consider Hospice and Signs You Are Ready
What Hospice Includes In Colorado
You receive coordinated support from nurses, physicians, CNAs, social workers, chaplains, and bereavement specialists. Services may include medications for symptom relief, medical equipment, 24/7 on-call support, caregiver education, and grief care for your family. State definitions emphasize full-person support wherever you call home.
At Aspen Grove Hospice, you and your family receive guidance before, during, and after hospice. We also offer one year of grief support.
Common Myths with Answers
- “You must have a Do Not Resuscitate order.” Not required to start hospice. Your choices are honored and can be updated anytime.
- “Hospice is only for the final days.” Many patients benefit for months. Earlier support often means better symptom control and fewer crises.
- “You cannot see your own doctor.” You may keep your primary physician involved if you wish.
How To Start the Conversation
- Talk with your current doctor about a hospice referral.
- Call Aspen Grove Hospice. We can visit, review goals, and coordinate next steps the same day in many situations.
- Involve your family or trusted friends. We will help everyone understand options and create a plan that fits your values.
Service Areas We Cover
We serve the Denver metro area, including Arapahoe, Adams, Douglas, Jefferson, Weld, Boulder, Elbert, Broomfield, and nearby communities. If you are outside these areas, call us and we will help you find resources.
Start Hospice Eligibility Check
Speak with our team at (720) 999-9854 or send us a message online. You can ask anything. We will listen first, explain options, and support your next step. Our team can review eligibility, contact your doctor if needed, and coordinate a prompt visit. You stay in control of every choice.
We are available 7 days a week with 24/7 on-call support, same-day evaluations when possible, and one year of bereavement care for your family. We serve the Denver metro, including Arapahoe, Adams, Douglas, Jefferson, Weld, Boulder, Elbert, Broomfield, and nearby communities.