Horizon Hospice founders and staff, 1978
1 media/founders_thumb.jpg 2021-02-15T13:29:42-06:00 Megan Keller Young 2e72a529e58eee72bb9ae4f1e37365aa654232ca 19 4 Horizon Hospice was originally founded by Ada Addington, Sharon Bunyan King, Dr. Francis Duda, and the Reverend Wilson Reed. Shortly after incorporating, they hired Dr. Michael Preodor as the first medical director and appointed a Board of Directors. plain 2021-04-20T16:25:11-05:00 Horizon Hospice records, MSHORI19, Series 1, Box 2, Folder 7, Special Collections & University Archives, University of Illinois Chicago. 1978 Megan Keller Young 2e72a529e58eee72bb9ae4f1e37365aa654232caThis page is referenced by:
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The Origins of Horizon Hospice
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Western medicine has had a difficult history with the natural process of dying. Understandably, medical resources are focused on preserving life. Everyone wants more time with their loved ones, and many illnesses and injuries can be healed by the heroic application of modern medicine. But the body is a finite structure, and focusing on solely repairing it fails to address how to care for those who face the end of their life.
Horizon Hospice was formed when hospice care and palliative medicine were relatively new ideas in Western medical practice. Inspired by the hospice movement in the United Kingdom, which was led by nurse Cicely Saunders, a group of concerned Chicagoans took up a similar effort to provide palliative and end-of-life care to the people of their city. Founding members included Ada Addington, Rev. J. Wilson Reed, Dr. Francis Duda, and Sharon Bunyan. They crafted a proposal and created Horizon Hospice, officially incorporated in 1978 as the first hospice in Chicago.
As the organization grew, Horizon Hospice developed numerous projects to ensure that people in Chicagoland received the care and assistance they needed—medical, emotional, and practical—as they or their loved ones faced the end of life, regardless of their ability to pay. The hospice created in-patient hospice care units and AIDS treatment homes, formed community support groups, and connected volunteers with end of life patients in need of support. The staff raised awareness of the benefits of hospice and palliative care, including training physicians and educating the public about potential services such as advance directives and alternative therapies to ease discomfort and pain. To reflect these additional services, the organization updated its name to Horizon Hospice and Palliative Care in 2005.
After 37 years of serving Chicagoland, Horizon Hospice and Palliative Care merged with JourneyCare and Midwest CareCenter to form JourneyCare. This section contains photographs, drafts, proposals, Articles of Incorporation, and more relating to the founding and formative years of Horizon.