About Staffing Services
Home Health Solutions Group Staffing is committed to providing comprehensive quality client and family centered care at the client's home or facility.
We provide services in a manner that personifies the highest level of honesty, professionalism and integrity being sensitive to the physical, emotional and spiritual needs of our clients and their family members.
Home Health Solutions Group Staffing provides services to clients without regard to age, race, religion, sex, national origin or disability.
Home Health Solutions Group Staffing is committed to conducting its business in compliance with the letter and spirit of all applicable Federal, State and local laws, regulations, standards and guidelines
OUR BROCHURES
OUR Mission Statement
Home Health Solutions Group Staffing is committed to providing palliative care and emotional comfort to all its clients in a fashion of
unparalleled excellence. We are recognized as the premier provider of nursing staffing services by matching
quality professionals to health care facilities, patients and their families in the areas we serve bringing quality
care to the home care environment and treating each person, patient, caregiver, family members and visitors with
respect and compassion
OUR GOALS
OUR VALUES
AREAS WE SERVE
Miami
Miami Beach
Coral Gables
Hialeah
Miami Springs
North Miami
Morth Miami Beach
Opa-Locka
South Miami
Homestead
Miami Lakes
Palmetto Bay
Doral
Bal Harbour
Bal Harbor Islands
Surfside
West Miami
Florida City
Biscayne Park
El Portal
Golden Beach
Pinecrest
Key largo
Islamorada
Tavernier
Meddley
North Bay Village
Key Biscayne
Sweetwater
Virginia Gardens
Hialeah Gardens
Aventura
Unincorporated Miami-Dade
Sunny Isles Beach
Cuttler Bay
Florida City
Redlands
WHAT IS PALLIATIVE CARE?
Palliative care, a board-certified medical specialty since 2006 in the US, has been around for centuries. Most people have experienced palliative medicine, which focuses on comfort care, symptom management and pain relief.
If you break a bone, the doctor treats it by immobilizing it with a cast and prescribing painkillers to make you comfortable.
The cast is curative, while the medications are palliative: they improve the quality of your life while you and your physician address the broken bone.
To palliate is “to make a disease or its symptoms less severe or unpleasant without removing the cause.”
Generally, palliative care is provided within the context of serious illness: chronic, progressive pulmonary disorders; renal disease;
chronic heart failure; HIV/AIDS; progressive neurological conditions; cancer, etc. It supports a patient’s physical,
emotional and psychosocial needs, providing comfort and improving quality of life.
An example: An oncologist who prescribes chemotherapy to treat cancer will also address nausea,
depression and anxiety by prescribing an anti-anxiety drug, recommending a therapist or arranging for pet visits.
A social worker or chaplain will provide family support, as well. All of these coping mechanisms are considered
palliative: they improve the quality of a patient's life while the patient and physician address the cancer.
What Is the History of Palliative Care?
Palliative care grew out of the hospice movement. Today 1,700 hospitals with 50 or more beds offer a palliative specialist or team. They work with a
patient’s healthcare team and specialists to address the physical, psychological, social or spiritual distress
of serious illness and its treatment.
What Kind of Patients Choose Palliative Care?
The American Society of Clinical Oncology has identified the characteristics of a patient who should receive palliative care but not curative treatment; these characteristics are applicable to patients with other diseases, too.
Talk to your family and your doctor about your goals of care and whether palliative care and/or hospice might improve your quality of life.