About — Quality & Safety
That sentence appears on hundreds of sites. It tells you almost nothing about whether the care is actually any good.
Quality in hospice should be measurable. It should be reported publicly. It should be reviewed by people outside the hospice itself. Below is what that looks like in practice at St. Marie's — in concrete terms families can verify, including how to check any hospice's quality record yourself.
Hospice quality data isn't private. It's publicly reported, and most families don't realize how much information is already available to them.
St. Marie's Hospice has been Medicare-certified since 2015. That isn't a one-time award. It requires ongoing compliance with the federal Conditions of Participation — the regulatory framework that governs every hospice in the country — and routine recertification surveys conducted by state surveyors. The certification renews only if standards continue to be met.
We're also accredited by the Community Health Accreditation Partner (CHAP), an independent non-profit accrediting body recognized by CMS. CHAP visits hospices on its own schedule, against its own standards, beyond what Medicare requires. Accreditation is voluntary — which is the point. It signals a hospice willing to be measured against a higher bar than the regulatory floor.
If you want to check our public quality data directly, Medicare publishes it on the Care Compare tool at medicare.gov/care-compare. You can compare hospices side by side on family satisfaction scores, clinical measures, and inspection results. Most families don't know the tool exists. We'd rather you use it than take our word for any claim on this page.
Every hospice in the country reports a standardized set of clinical measures to Medicare through the Hospice Item Set (HIS) — every patient, every admission, every discharge. The measures matter because they’re tied to specific care actions, with specific timeframes attached.
These aren’t internal aspirations. They’re federal reporting requirements with audit trails, and performance against them is part of public CMS data. A hospice that takes a casual approach to any of them is creating a measurable gap that shows up in the data, not just in the care.
Regulatory measures only describe part of what keeps patients safe. The rest is in day-to-day operational discipline.
Measurement only matters if it leads to change.
Clinical leadership reviews HIS data, CAHPS results, internal incident reports, and family feedback on a regular cycle. When patterns surface — a delay in a specific intervention, recurring concerns about communication, a measure trending in the wrong direction — the quality improvement team works on root cause and implements a corrective change. Then the metric gets monitored to confirm the change held. That last step is the one most programs skip.
Families have a direct line into this process. Concerns get documented, escalated to clinical leadership, and answered in writing. If a concern can't be resolved with us, families have the right to escalate to CHAP, to Medicare, or to the Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA), and we provide the contact information without resistance. A hospice that resists external review is signaling something a family should pay attention to.
When you're evaluating a hospice — including ours — these are the questions worth asking. A hospice that takes quality seriously will answer them directly. A hospice that doesn't will deflect.
in Detroit, Southfield, Troy, Warren, Sterling Heights, or anywhere across the Michigan tri-county area, we welcome the harder questions. The right hospice doesn’t ask you to take quality on faith — it shows you the record.
Call (800) 489-7977 or reach us through our contact page. Bring the questions. We’d rather earn your trust through a real conversation than ask for it on a webpage.