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Our Locations

Community Care Hospice

1669 Rombach Ave.
Wilmington, OH 45177
Phone: 937.382.5400
Fax: 937.383.3898

Ohio's Community Mercy Hospice

1830 N. Limestone St.
Springfield, OH 45503
Phone: 937.390.9665

Ohio's Hospice at United Church Homes

Chapel Hill
12200 Strausser St. NW
Canal Fulton, OH 44614
Phone: 330.264.4899

Ohio's Hospice at United Church Homes

200 Timberline Dr. #1212
Marietta, OH 45750
Phone: 740.629.9990

Ohio's Hospice LifeCare

1900 Akron Rd.
Wooster, OH 44691
Phone: 330.264.4899

Ohio's Hospice Loving Care

779 London Ave.
Marysville, OH 43040
Phone: 937.644.1928

Ohio's Hospice of Butler & Warren Counties

5940 Long Meadow Dr.
Middletown, OH 45005
Phone: 513.422.0300

Ohio's Hospice of Dayton

324 Wilmington Ave.
Dayton, OH 45420
Phone: 937.256.4490
1.800.653.4490

Ohio's Hospice of Central Ohio

Newark

2269 Cherry Valley Rd.
Newark, OH 43055
Phone: 740.788.1400

Inpatient Care Center

1320 West Main St.
Newark, OH 43055
Phone: 740.344.0379

Ohio's Hospice of Central Ohio at
The Ohio State University
Wexner Medical Center

410 W 10th Ave - 7th Floor
Columbus, OH 43210
Phone: 614.685.0001

Ohio's Hospice of Fayette County

222 N. Oakland Ave.
Washington Court House, OH 43160
Phone: 740.335.0149

Ohio's Hospice of Miami County

3230 N. Co. Rd. 25A
Troy, OH 45373
Phone: 937.335.5191

Ohio's Hospice of Morrow County

228 South St.
Mount Gilead, OH 43338
Phone: 419.946.9822

Ohio's Hospice

Dayton

7575 Paragon Rd.
Dayton, OH 45459
Phone: 937.256.4490
1.800.653.4490

Cincinnati

11013 Montgomery Rd.
Cincinnati, OH 45249
1.800.653.4490

Honor Flight Celebrates Hospice Patient Military Service

Ohio’s Hospice of Dayton patient and Veteran Bill Elliott came home exhausted, but happy, from an Honor Flight celebrating his service to the nation.

“I am excited for him,” said son Forst Elliott about the Honor Flight trip for his father. “It is such an affirmation of his life.”

Bill’s hospice team and his caregivers from St. Leonard’s worked hard to make sure Bill could safely and comfortably enjoy the Honor Flight journey. “This would never have happened for him unless he was here in Dayton and in the care of hospice and St. Leonard’s,” Forst says.

Bill had been living independently in Arizona until the day Forst received a phone call at 3 am advising him that his father had been stopped while driving the wrong way on a one-way street. Bill was hospitalized. His oxygen was low, he suffered from COPD and dementia. Ironically, Forst is a financial consultant who routinely advises families to prepare for the unexpected. Not anticipating how soon he would need to activate the document, he had asked his father to complete the form designating him Power of Attorney during his last visit.

“It was clear he was not getting the care he needed leading up to his hospitalization,” Forst observes. “It was important to me or him to be around family, so he agreed to come back to Dayton. His condition has dramatically improved since he is back, around family, and receiving the level of care he needs from hospice and St. Leonard’s.“

Bill was always proud of his Marine service. He bragged about being able to wear his dress blues at the age of 78. With his return to Dayton, Forst learned more about his father’s military experience than he had ever known. Bill was a member of ROTC in high school. After graduation, at age 19, he was attending night classes at the University of Louisville and working as a clerk at the L & N Railroad when he earned a nomination for entrance to Annapolis Naval Academy. He earned a perfect score on the entrance exam.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bill enlisted in the Marines in 1951 and served as a drill sergeant at Camp Pendleton during the Korean conflict. Following his service he returned to Louisville, where he met and married his wife. The couple settled in Dayton in 1963, and there, working full-time and starting a family, Bill finished his degree at the University of Dayton. Bill worked for a time for Mead and then joined ABF Freight. While his marriage ended and he moved from Ohio to Arizona, his relationship with his five children remained strong. Family members were the first to welcome him back from his Honor Flight adventure.

“I was never in the service,” his son Forst says, “but I know for my Dad it was a real point of pride. I’m happy for him to have this trip with his fellow Veterans. It is a brotherhood only they can share.”

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