Hospice Aide Services in Chicago, IL

Short answer: A hospice aide is a certified caregiver who visits a patient’s home several times a week to assist with bathing, dressing, grooming, and personal care. In Chicago, hospice aide services through Suncrest are part of every care plan and are fully covered by Medicare and Medicaid. They do not replace family caregivers. They give them real, scheduled relief.

Hospice Aide Services in Chicago

2-5x
Weekly aide visits based on patient needs and care plan
100%
Covered by Medicare Hospice Benefit for eligible patients
75 hrs
Minimum Illinois training required for certified hospice aides

What to Know About Hospice Aide Services in Chicago

  • Hospice aides provide personal care at home: bathing, dressing, grooming, oral hygiene, and mobility assistance
  • They are not nurses. They do not manage medications, perform wound care, or make clinical decisions
  • In Chicago, hospice aide visits are covered at 100% under the Medicare Hospice Benefit
  • Suncrest aides visit multiple times per week, more often than the national average
  • The same aide visits consistently so the patient is not meeting a new person every time
  • Aide visits give family caregivers scheduled, predictable time away from caregiving

The Lasting Impact of a Hospice CNA

This short video captures something that is hard to put into words: what it actually means to a patient and family when a skilled, compassionate aide shows up consistently through the hardest weeks of their lives. Watch it before reading on.

What Can a Hospice Aide Do?

What can a hospice aide do?

A hospice aide can assist with any personal care task that helps the patient stay clean, comfortable, and safe at home. According to Medicare’s hospice coverage guidelines, aide services are defined as hands-on personal care and related support tasks. Here is what that looks like in practice.

Personal Care

Bathing or showering, sponge baths for patients who cannot stand, oral hygiene, hair care, shaving, nail care, and skin care. For patients who are bedridden or have limited mobility, these tasks are difficult or impossible without trained help. The aide knows how to do them safely and in a way that preserves dignity.

Dressing and Grooming

Helping the patient get dressed and undressed, selecting appropriate clothing, and maintaining the patient’s appearance. For many patients, maintaining a sense of normalcy and personal presentation matters more than people expect.

Mobility and Transfers

Helping the patient move safely from the bed to a chair, wheelchair, or bathroom. Trained aides use proper body mechanics and safe transfer techniques, both to protect the patient from falls and to protect themselves from injury. Hoyer lift use and other assisted transfer equipment is covered in aide training.

Meal Preparation

Preparing simple meals and snacks according to the patient’s dietary needs and preferences. For patients on pureed or soft diets, the aide prepares food accordingly. They also assist with feeding when the patient cannot manage utensils independently.

Light Housekeeping

Keeping the patient’s immediate living space clean and safe. This includes laundry, changing bed linens, light vacuuming, and dishes. It is focused on the spaces the patient uses, not the whole home.

Observation and Reporting

The hospice aide visits more consistently than almost anyone else on the care team. That puts them in a position to notice changes: a new skin issue, a shift in appetite, a change in mood or cognition, signs that something may be developing. They report those observations to the supervising nurse, who can then act on them. That early-warning function is one of the most underappreciated parts of what aides do.

What a Hospice Aide Cannot Do

Hospice aides cannot administer medications, perform wound care, insert or manage catheters, make clinical assessments, or carry out any skilled nursing task. Those responsibilities belong to the registered nurse. The aide and the nurse work together as part of the same care team, but their roles are distinct.

What Is the Difference Between a Hospice Aide and a Hospice Nurse?

What is the difference between a hospice aide and a hospice nurse

The hospice aide and the hospice nurse serve different functions. The nurse manages the clinical side. The aide handles personal care. Both are essential, and both are included in a Suncrest hospice care plan in Chicago.

Role Hospice Aide (HHA/CNA) Hospice Nurse (RN)
Primary focus Personal care and daily living activities Clinical assessment, pain management, medications
Training 75+ hours (Illinois minimum); CNA or HHA certification 2-4 years nursing education; RN license
Visit tasks Bathing, dressing, grooming, transfers, meal prep, light housekeeping Symptom assessment, medication adjustment, wound care, physician communication
Can give medications? No. Can give reminders only. Yes, within scope of nursing practice
Visit frequency (typical) 2-5 times per week 1-3 times per week; available 24/7 by phone
Medicare coverage Fully covered under Medicare Hospice Benefit Fully covered under Medicare Hospice Benefit

In practice, the aide often has the highest contact frequency with the patient. They are the ones showing up Tuesday and Thursday and Saturday, getting to know the patient’s preferences and quirks, building the kind of daily trust that the nurse does not have time to build on a less frequent visit schedule.

How Hospice Aide Services Work in Chicago

Chicago is a large, dense city with widely varied neighborhoods. A hospice aide serving a patient in Logan Square is navigating a different daily reality than one serving a patient in Beverly or Edgewater or Skokie. Suncrest’s Chicago aide team is based locally and serves patients throughout the city and the surrounding suburbs.

Here is what the aide relationship looks like for a Suncrest patient in Chicago:

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Care Plan Assignment

Within the first few days of hospice enrollment, the supervising nurse builds a care plan that specifies what aide services the patient needs, how often the aide will visit, and what specific tasks each visit will cover. The family is part of that conversation.

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Consistent Assignment

Suncrest assigns the same aide to visit your loved one rather than rotating different people through. That consistency matters. A patient at the end of life should not be introduced to a new stranger at every visit.

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Nurse Communication

After each visit, the aide documents what they observed and communicates any changes to the supervising nurse. If something concerns the aide during a visit, they can reach the on-call nurse immediately. The clinical and personal care sides stay in sync.

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Frequency Adjusts as Needs Change

As the patient’s condition changes, the aide visit schedule adjusts. Patients who are closer to end of life typically receive more frequent aide visits. The care plan is a living document, not a fixed schedule set at enrollment.

Aide visits are one part of the full picture. See the full range of Suncrest hospice services in Chicago to understand how the care team works together.

How Much Does a Hospice Aide Make in Chicago?

Hospice aide pay in Chicago varies depending on employer, certification level, experience, and whether the role is through a Medicare-certified hospice agency or a staffing arrangement. Here is a realistic picture based on available data.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the national median wage for home health and personal care aides was $33,530 per year as of recent reporting. In the Chicago metro area, wages typically run higher than the national median due to cost of living and demand. Hospice-specific roles, which require additional training and often involve more complex patient situations, tend to pay toward the higher end of the aide range.

Typical hospice aide hourly wages in Chicago fall between $17 and $24 per hour, depending on the agency and the aide’s certification level. CNAs (Certified Nursing Assistants) generally earn more than HHAs (Home Health Aides) for equivalent roles because of their additional clinical training.

Most hospice agencies in Illinois, including Medicare-certified providers, offer benefits including health insurance, paid time off, mileage reimbursement, and ongoing training. Some offer tuition assistance for aides pursuing RN licensure.

Wages change over time. For current postings and rates, the CareerOneStop tool from the U.S. Department of Labor provides up-to-date local wage data by occupation and metro area.

What Qualifications Do You Need to Be a Hospice Aide in Chicago?

In Illinois, hospice aides must meet the requirements set by the Illinois Department of Public Health and federal CMS Conditions of Participation for hospice providers. Here is what that requires.

Minimum Training Requirements

Federal hospice regulations under 42 CFR Part 418 require hospice aides to complete at least 75 hours of training. Of those 75 hours, at least 16 must be supervised practical training in a clinical setting before the aide begins working with patients independently.

Competency Evaluation

After completing the training program, the aide must pass a competency evaluation that covers the specific tasks they will perform. The supervising nurse observes and evaluates the aide’s ability to perform those tasks correctly. An aide cannot provide care in a patient’s home until they have passed this evaluation.

CNA vs. HHA Certification

Many hospice agencies in Chicago prefer or require aides to hold a CNA (Certified Nursing Assistant) certification rather than basic HHA (Home Health Aide) certification. CNA programs are longer (typically 150 hours or more) and include additional clinical skills training. CNAs are also required to maintain their certification through continuing education and must remain on the state’s Nurse Aide Registry.

Background Check and Other Requirements

All hospice aides working in Illinois must pass a criminal background check. Most employers also require CPR certification, a negative TB test, and proof of eligibility to work in the United States. Some agencies require a valid driver’s license and reliable transportation.

Ongoing Training

CMS requires that hospice aides receive at least 12 hours of in-service training per year. This training covers areas like communication, patient rights, infection control, and safety. Suncrest provides this training to all aides on the Chicago team as part of ongoing employment.

Other Suncrest Hospice Services in Chicago

Hospice aide services are one part of what Suncrest provides in Chicago. The aide works as part of a coordinated care team that includes nurses, social workers, chaplains, and bereavement counselors. Here are the other services that work alongside aide care.

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Hospice Social Work in Chicago

A licensed social worker helps families navigate Medicaid paperwork, community resources, advance care planning, and the emotional weight of end-of-life caregiving.

Social Work in Chicago

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Respite Care in Chicago

Medicare covers up to five consecutive days of inpatient respite so the primary family caregiver can take a real break. Suncrest arranges placement and handles the transition.

Respite Care in Chicago

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Bereavement Counseling in Chicago

Grief support for families for 13 months after a patient passes. Individual counseling, grief support groups, and regular check-ins throughout Chicago and the suburbs.

Bereavement Counseling in Chicago

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Caregiver Education in Chicago

Suncrest nurses and social workers provide ongoing education to family caregivers about what to expect at each stage of the illness and how to provide safe, effective care at home.

Caregiver Education in Chicago

Hospice Aide Services in Chicago: Common Questions

A hospice aide can assist with bathing, dressing, grooming, oral hygiene, transfers, mobility, meal preparation, and light housekeeping. They can also provide medication reminders (but not administration) and report any changes they observe to the supervising nurse. They cannot perform skilled nursing tasks like wound care, catheter management, or medication administration.

A hospice nurse (RN) is a licensed clinician who manages pain, adjusts medications, performs wound care, and communicates with the physician. A hospice aide is a certified caregiver who handles personal care: bathing, dressing, grooming, and transfers. The nurse typically visits one to three times per week. The aide visits two to five times per week. Both are covered by Medicare and both are part of every Suncrest hospice plan in Chicago.

Hospice aide wages in Chicago typically range from $17 to $24 per hour, depending on certification level, experience, and employer. CNAs generally earn more than HHAs in equivalent roles. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a national median of $33,530 per year for home health and personal care aides. Chicago metro wages run higher than the national median. Check CareerOneStop or current job postings for updated local rates.

Illinois requires hospice aides to complete a minimum of 75 hours of training, including at least 16 hours of supervised clinical practice, and to pass a competency evaluation before working with patients. Many Chicago hospice agencies prefer or require CNA certification, which involves more extensive training (typically 150 hours or more). A background check, CPR certification, and TB test are also required. Aides must complete 12 hours of ongoing in-service training per year.

Yes. Hospice aide services are fully covered under the Medicare Hospice Benefit for eligible patients. There is no copay, no deductible, and no cost to the family for aide visits that are part of the hospice plan of care. Illinois Medicaid provides equivalent coverage for qualifying patients who are not on Medicare. Suncrest handles all billing and authorizations.

Aide visit frequency is determined by the care plan, which is built around the patient’s specific needs. Most hospice patients receive aide visits two to five times per week. As the patient’s condition changes, the frequency typically increases. Suncrest visits more often than the national hospice average, which means more consistent support for both the patient and the family caregiver.

Ask About Hospice Aide Services in Chicago

If your loved one is receiving hospice care in Chicago, aide services are already part of what they are entitled to. If you are still exploring whether hospice is the right step, aide services are one of the most tangible things that changes day-to-day life for the patient and the family caregiver.

Call the Suncrest Chicago team or visit the location page to ask questions or get started. No pressure, no obligation. Contact Suncrest Hospice Chicago here.