Everyone deserves to reach their rest, in peace.
Every year, we reach out to thousands
of families in need.
Since 1979, Hospice of Wake County has been dedicated to promoting and improving quality of life for people reaching the end of life. Since 2003, the number of patients we work with in homes, hospitals and assisted-living facilities has more than doubled.
As the most well-established provider of its kind in the area, we serve more than 6,000 people each year, through a range of bereavement care and nursing services.
We serve people from all walks of life, all ages, all backgrounds and all income levels, suffering from any life-threatening condition.
And we serve an aging and ever-expanding region that encompasses 4,200 square miles and more than 1.5 million people.
Today, we're building the only facility of its kind in our area.
While many hospice patients are able to remain at home, there is a growing and urgent need in Wake County for a freestanding hospice facility for those who need inpatient care. To meet this need and provide important additional services for our community at large, Hospice of Wake County has embarked on an ambitious and long-overdue campaign to build the region's first such facility.
The new campus will provide a well-coordinated center from which we can expand and enhance our services throughout our five-county coverage area. Even more dramatically, it will provide specially designed spaces for patients and families to approach the end of life in comfort and with dignity.
Just as important, it will house a bereavement center and spiritual retreat open to the community at large so that Hospice of Wake County can be a much-needed resource for everyone who is grappling with end-of-life issues.
Right now, we need your help.
This unique facility is specifically designed to meet a range of community needs, from easing the strain on health care facilities, to expanding the availability of grief counseling and community-wide programs, to, most essential of all, giving every individual the opportunity to make appropriate choices about his or her own care.
We all have a stake in this, whether we're concerned about the emotional and economic health of the community at large, or facing the very personal anguish of saying goodbye to a loved one.
To meet your needs, and your neighbors' needs, and our community's needs, we need your support. Please contribute to the Build Hospice of Wake County campaign today.
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