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Find an Online Hospice and End-of-Life Counseling Therapist and Counselor Today โ€“ Page 92

Hospice and End-of-life Counseling therapists are ready to support you – your decision to seek help is a strong step, and youโ€™re in the right place.

Online sessions can offer flexibility, privacy and convenience so you can meet when and where it works for you. Browse the listings below to explore caring professionals and find someone who feels like the right fit.

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Yasha Carpentier

Stress, AnxietyRelationshipFamilyTrauma and abuse+10 more
I am licensed in Washington with 24 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress…
๐Ÿ“…24 years experience
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Yasmeen Desnavi

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Welcome! I am an Integrative Therapeutic Counsellor (MBACP) with a Bachelorโ€™s Degree (Honours) in Psychology and years of experience working…
๐Ÿ“…3 years experience
๐Ÿ“United Kingdom

Yasmin Elkhair

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Welcome! I am a licensed independent clinical therapist who provides psychotherapeutic services to clients residing in the Washington, DC area.…
๐Ÿ“…25 years experience
๐Ÿ“District of Columbia

Ylan Hunt

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I am licensed in California with 10 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with trauma,…
๐Ÿ“…10 years experience
๐Ÿ“California

Yolanda Frost

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I am a fully insured, licensed and BACP registered counsellor in the UK with many years of professional and counselling…
๐Ÿ“…4 years experience
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Yolanda Knox

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Yung-Mei Leong

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๐Ÿ“…8 years experience
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Yunus Mohamed

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๐Ÿ“…21 years experience
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Yvette Skope

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Yvette Carreon

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Yvette Lanausse

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Yvette Strawbridge

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Yvonne (Eve) Klotz

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Zamarys Webster

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Hi! I am a Licensed Clinical Social Worker with over 10 years of experience in varying fields. I specialize in…
๐Ÿ“…10 years experience
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Zeeil Patel

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๐Ÿ“…5 years experience
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Zeinab Gulzar

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๐Ÿ“…4 years experience
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Zeree Adams

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I am licensed in California with 17 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress…
๐Ÿ“…17 years experience
๐Ÿ“California

Zoe Silk

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I am licensed in the UK with 12 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with…
๐Ÿ“…13 years experience
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1 91 92

Therapy for hospice and end-of-life support

Facing the end of life, supporting a loved one in hospice, or grieving after a loss are some of the most profound experiences a person can go through. Hospice and end-of-life counseling is a type of psychosocial and emotional support focused on helping patients, family members, and caregivers navigate anticipatory grief, practical decisions, meaning-making, spiritual concerns, and bereavement. Many people now seek this kind of support through online therapy for convenience, safety, and continuity of care.

What hospice and end-of-life counseling involves

Hospice and end-of-life counseling helps people process the emotions that come with terminal illness and dying. Counselors work with patients to explore fears, regrets, unfinished business, and ways to find peace or meaning. They help family members and caregivers cope with stress, role changes, anticipatory grief, and caregiving burnout. After a loss, therapists offer bereavement support to reduce isolation, manage complicated grief reactions, and rebuild daily life while honoring the relationship that was lost.

Therapists who focus on this area often draw on grief-focused approaches, meaning-centered therapies, narrative therapy, family systems work, and trauma-informed care. Some also have training in palliative care, hospice social work, pastoral counseling, or specific bereavement programs. The goal is to provide compassionate, practical, and individualized support tailored to each personโ€™s cultural, spiritual, and emotional needs.

Common concerns and needs people bring to end-of-life counseling

People come to hospice and end-of-life counseling with a wide range of concerns. Patients may want help coping with pain-related anxiety, fear of dying, loss of identity, or leaving loved ones behind. Families and partners often need support making care decisions, communicating with medical teams, managing legal or practical matters, and holding emotionally difficult conversations.

Caregivers commonly seek help with exhaustion, guilt, role strain, and balancing caregiving with other responsibilities. After a death, many people struggle with loneliness, shock, complex grief reactions, difficulty functioning, anniversaries that trigger intense feelings, or unresolved issues with the person who died.

Therapy can address emotional reactions like anxiety and depression, practical concerns like planning and legacy projects, and existential questions about meaning, faith, and values. Cultural and spiritual preferences are central to good end-of-life support, and many therapists tailor their approach to respect religious beliefs and family traditions.

How online therapy can help with hospice and end-of-life concerns

Online therapy makes it easier to get support during a time when mobility, energy, and schedules are limited. You can meet a therapist from home, from a hospital waiting room, or while on hospice rounds, which reduces the stress of travel and allows consistent contact when it matters most.

Video sessions enable face-to-face connection when in-person visits arenโ€™t possible. Phone or messaging sessions can be a less taxing option when energy is low or emotions are intense. Online formats also make it simpler to include distant family members in joint sessions, coordinate with other providers, and continue support after a transition such as discharge from hospice or the move to bereavement care.

Benefits of online therapy compared with in-person sessions

Both online and in-person therapy have value, and your choice may depend on personal needs. Online therapy often offers greater flexibility for scheduling and location, allowing support at times and places that are realistic during illness and caregiving. It reduces travel time and can be less tiring for patients and caregivers.

Online therapy can provide quick access to specialists in hospice and grief who may not be available locally, making it easier to find a therapist whose training and approach fit your needs. For people who are immunocompromised, homebound, or living far from specialized services, online options can be lifesaving in terms of maintaining continuity of care.

In-person sessions may be preferred for hands-on settings, bedside visits, or when you want a physical presence. Online therapy can complement or replace in-person care depending on the situation, and many people find a combination of both works best across different stages.

What to expect from online hospice and end-of-life therapy

Initial sessions typically focus on your immediate needs, current stressors, and short-term goals. A therapist will ask about the medical situation, family dynamics, spiritual preferences, and what kinds of support you find most helpful. They may provide coping strategies for anxiety, relaxation techniques, communication tools for difficult conversations, and guidance on legacy-building activities.

Sessions can involve the patient alone, family members together, or caregivers separately, depending on whatโ€™s most helpful. Frequency varies by needโ€”some people meet weekly, others prefer shorter, more frequent check-ins, or on-demand support during crisis moments. Therapists should discuss confidentiality, emergency procedures, and how they coordinate with hospice teams or medical providers when appropriate.

Many therapists offer flexible formats: video for deeper connection, phone for low-energy days, and secure messaging for short questions or check-ins. Before starting, confirm the therapistโ€™s licensure and whether they can provide services in your region, and ask about fees, sliding-scale options, and insurance coverage.

How to choose the right therapist for end-of-life and hospice support

When looking for a therapist, consider their experience with hospice, palliative care, grief counseling, or working with terminal illness. Ask about their therapeutic approach and how they handle cultural and spiritual issues that matter to you. Itโ€™s reasonable to inquire about prior work with families, caregivers, or specific populations such as older adults.

Check that the therapist is licensed to provide telehealth where you are located and confirm what technologies they use. Look for someone who communicates clearly about confidentiality, emergency plans, and how they coordinate with medical teams. Trust your instincts during an initial consultationโ€”feeling heard, respected, and understood is a strong indicator the therapist is a good fit.

Also consider practical matters: session length, availability for family sessions, fee structure, and flexibility during crisis times. If you want spiritual or pastoral support integrated into therapy, ask whether the clinician has relevant experience or collaborates with chaplains and spiritual leaders.

Taking the first step

Reaching out for hospice or end-of-life support can feel hard, but itโ€™s a meaningful step toward relief, clarity, and connection. Start by searching for therapists who list hospice, palliative care, grief, or bereavement in their specialties. Schedule an initial consultation to ask about experience, approach, and what support looks like in an online format.

Prepare a few questions or concerns to bring to that first session: what you hope to address, important family dynamics, and any practical constraints. You donโ€™t need to have everything figured outโ€”therapists are trained to meet people where they are and to help create space for difficult conversations, practical decisions, and healing next steps.

Getting support during this time is a sign of strength and care for yourself and your loved ones. Whether you need short-term guidance, ongoing bereavement support, or help coordinating emotional and practical needs, finding the right therapist online can provide comfort and clarity when itโ€™s needed most.

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