Elderly woman looking down indoors

Where someone with dementia should die — why the care home is usually the right answer

A preferred place of death is a statement of where a person would like to be when they die. For people with dementia the options are typically the care home they live in, a hospice, or hospital. Most people, when asked before their condition advances significantly, express a preference to die in a familiar setting rather than in hospital. For many with dementia, the care home they have lived in for months or years effectively becomes their home, and dying there, in familiar surroundings with known staff, is often the most peaceful option. Hospices can provide specialist palliative care and are appropriate when symptom management needs are complex. Recording a preferred place of death as part of an advance care plan gives family and medical teams clear guidance. It is a preference, not a binding instruction, but it carries significant weight in decision-making.

Frequently Asked Questions Related to end of life

Grieving someone you lost in stages — the particular weight of dementia bereavement

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Support for bereaved dementia carers — the help available for a grief that doesn't fit the usual shape

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Registering the death of someone with dementia — the practical steps, plainly explained

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When your parent with dementia dies in a care home — what happens next and what can wait

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Grieving someone who is still alive — the loss that begins long before dementia ends

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What a good death looks like for someone with dementia — and how to make it possible

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How to talk to a care home about end of life — the conversation to have before it's urgent

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Where someone with dementia should die — why the care home is usually the right answer

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