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A female home health nurse in blue scrubs uses a stethoscope to check the heartbeat of an elderly woman resting comfortably in a chair.

The Role of Physical Therapy in Hospice Care

June 2, 2026 by Journey Palliative and Hospice

Physical therapy in hospice care focuses on comfort, safety, and preserved mobility rather than recovery. A hospice physical therapist helps reduce pain through gentle movement, prevents falls, teaches safe transfers, and coaches caregivers on positioning and equipment. Under the Medicare Hospice Benefit, physical therapy can be included when it supports the patient’s plan of care.

When a loved one enters hospice, the goal of care shifts. The focus moves from curing to comforting, from progress to peace. That shift can leave families wondering about therapies that once felt central to recovery, like physical therapy.

The honest answer is that physical therapy still has a meaningful place in hospice care. It just looks different. Instead of working toward strength gains or rehab milestones, a hospice physical therapist helps your loved one stay as comfortable, safe, and independent as possible for as long as possible.

What Physical Therapy Looks Like in Hospice Care

In hospice, physical therapy is comfort-focused, not recovery-focused. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services recognizes physical therapy as a service that can be covered under the Medicare Hospice Benefit when it supports the goals of the patient’s plan of care.

A hospice physical therapist may help your loved one:

  • Move more comfortably in bed or a chair
  • Transfer safely between bed, wheelchair, and bathroom
  • Reduce pain related to stiffness or immobility
  • Maintain function long enough to enjoy meaningful moments with family
  • Avoid falls, pressure injuries, and worsening discomfort

This kind of therapy is gentle, paced, and patient-led. Sessions can be short. The therapist watches for fatigue, follows what your loved one can tolerate that day, and adjusts as needs change.

How Hospice Physical Therapy Differs From Rehab PT

If you’re used to thinking of physical therapy as something that happens after surgery or a hospital stay, the hospice version may surprise you.

Standard rehab PT focuses on recovery. Hospice PT focuses on quality of life.

Standard Rehab PTHospice PT
Restore function and strengthPreserve comfort and dignity
Push toward measurable progressAdjust to current ability
Long-term goal settingShort-term, day-by-day goals
Sessions may be intensiveSessions are gentle and brief
Discharge when goals are metCare continues as needs evolve

If you’re weighing this shift in care priorities, our guide on hospice vs. continuing treatment walks through how families think it through.

What a Hospice Physical Therapy Visit Looks Like

A first visit usually starts with a conversation, not exercises. The therapist will:

  1. Assess current mobility, pain, and safety risks. This includes how your loved one moves in bed, how steady they are when standing, and where the home setup helps or creates risk.
  2. Talk with you about goals. Maybe it’s walking to the patio one more time. Maybe it’s sitting up comfortably for family visits. Goals in hospice are personal and meaningful.
  3. Build a gentle plan. This may include a light range of motion work, positioning techniques, transfer training, or recommendations for equipment.
  4. Coach caregivers. Family members often learn the most from these visits. The therapist shows you how to help safely without straining your own back or your loved one’s body.

Visits are coordinated with the rest of the hospice care team, including nurses, aides, social workers, and chaplains.

Who Benefits From Hospice Physical Therapy

Physical therapy in hospice isn’t right for every patient or every stage. Your hospice physician and care team will decide together with you whether it fits the current plan of care.

It often helps patients who:

  • Have recently transitioned from a hospital or skilled nursing to home
  • Live with pain related to immobility or muscle stiffness
  • Are still walking but at high fall risk
  • Have advanced dementia and need positioning support
  • Want to keep participating in family routines a little longer
  • Are stabilizing after a recent decline

For some patients in late-stage decline, the team may step back from active PT and shift to comfort positioning instead. That’s a sign the plan is responsive to your loved one’s needs, not a sign that care has stopped.

How Physical Therapy Fits With the Rest of Hospice Care

Physical therapy rarely works alone. It’s one piece of a coordinated hospice care plan that may also include:

  • Specialized pain management for symptom control
  • Home health aide visits for personal care and bathing
  • In-home caregiving for daily support
  • Durable medical equipment like hospital beds, walkers, and wheelchairs
  • Respite care so primary caregivers can rest

When pain is making it hard to move safely, the PT and the pain management team work together. Our blog on what specialized pain management looks like in hospice explains how that side of the team operates. 

Common Questions Families Ask About Hospice Physical Therapy

  • Is physical therapy covered under hospice? It can be. Under the Medicare Hospice Benefit, physical therapy may be included when it supports the goals in the hospice plan of care. The care team decides what’s appropriate for each patient.
  • Will my loved one get worse if PT stops? Hospice physical therapy is designed to match your loved one’s current condition. If active PT is no longer appropriate, the team shifts to comfort positioning and caregiver coaching. The goal stays the same: comfort and dignity.
  • How often does the physical therapist visit? It depends on the plan of care. Some patients see PT weekly, others on an as-needed basis, and others may have only a one-time evaluation and caregiver training visit.
  • Can PT help prevent falls at home? Often, yes. The therapist can recommend grab bars, walker adjustments, safer transfer techniques, and changes to the home layout that reduce fall risk.
  • Does the therapist do exercises with my loved one? Sometimes. A gentle range of motion or seated exercises may help with stiffness and circulation. The therapist adjusts each session to what your loved one can comfortably tolerate that day.

Supporting Families Across Burbank and Greater Los Angeles

Journey Hospice provides physical therapy services as part of our full hospice care offering across Burbank, Pasadena, Los Angeles, and surrounding communities. You can view our full service area here.

Our team meets families where they are: in private homes, assisted living communities, board and care homes, and skilled nursing facilities throughout LA County.

Talk With Our Team About What PT Could Look Like for Your Loved One

You don’t have to figure this out alone. Our care team can walk you through what hospice physical therapy looks like for your loved one’s specific situation, what’s covered, and how it fits with the rest of the plan of care.

Schedule a consultation or call (818) 748-3427 to talk with a Journey Hospice care coordinator. We’re here whenever you’re ready.

Filed Under: Hospice Services Tagged With: comfort care at home, end-of-life care, fall prevention hospice, hospice care Burbank, hospice care team, hospice los angeles county, hospice mobility care, hospice services, Medicare hospice benefits, physical therapy hospice

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