Connecticut Hospice Nurses celebrating

In celebration of National Nurses Month, May’s blog will recognize the enormous contribution of nursing to the hospice movement – in the United States and worldwide.

The Legacy of Florence Wald and the Founding of American Hospice

The Connecticut Hospice, Inc., America’s first, was founded by Nurse Florence Wald. After earning her Masters in Nursing in 1941 and serving in the United States Signal Corp in World War Two, Florence was Dean of the Yale School of Nursing from 1959 to 1966, and became a full Professor of Nursing in 1980. Inspired by the work of Dr. Cicely Saunders, a one-time nursing student who started the modern hospice movement at St. Christopher’s Hospice in London, she founded The Connecticut Hospice in 1974, making it not only the first hospice in America, but the first hospice in the world to care for patients at home.

Florence Wald - mother-of-hospice-care

Fifty Years of Nursing Leadership at Connecticut Hospice

Fifty years later, The Connecticut Hospice remains a leader in the hospice movement in Connecticut, the United States, and around the world. The contributions of nursing, not only at Connecticut Hospice, but to hospice nationwide, cannot be overstated. Hospice care is nurse-driven, nurse-supported, and nurse-provided, whether it is delivered to patients at home, in assisted living or skilled nursing facilities, in free-standing hospices, or in hospital-based hospice.

Nurse feeding a bed-bound hospice patient in front or a picture window of the outsied biews. jpg

A Statewide Network of Hospice Nursing Excellence

Hospice care of unparalleled excellence is provided by the nursing staff of The Connecticut Hospice, headquartered in Branford and crossing the state from Fairfield in the west, Meriden in the north, to Essex and Westbrook in the east. Nine full-time registered nurses, two full-time licensed practical nurses, and seven full-time certified nursing assistants serve patients at home, in nursing homes, and in skilled nursing facilities, providing 24-7 availability for visits, complementing social work, volunteer, and spiritual care staff.

Inpatient and Leadership Roles Strengthen Hospice Impact

Additional nursing staff caring for hospice inpatients in our 52-bed licensed inpatient facility on the water in Branford includes eighteen registered nurses and eleven certified nursing assistants. Senior leadership also sees its complement of nurses, with a new RN Chief Executive Officer, and an RN Chief Operating Officer, Director of Home Care, and Director of Inpatient Nursing. Four advance-practice registered nurses serve our palliative care and GUIDE patients and provide inpatient medical care in collaboration with the physicians of the Department of Medicine. Physician staff, in contrast, consists of one full-time, and four part-time MD/DOs.

nurse wrapping blanket around sitting female patient

Celebrating Nurses During National Nurses Month 2025

The Connecticut Hospice exemplifies the critical role and importance of nurses in American health care. Join us in celebrating them for National Nurses Month, May 2025.

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Young woman laying under blankets in a hospital bed with her head covered. A nurse sits on the side of her bed and holds her hand.

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