Skip to content

Our Locations

Are you looking for care for yourself or a loved one?

If so, please call 800.653.4490 and press option 2. A member of our care team will be happy to assist you in finding a location near you. If you are a physician seeking referral assistance, please call 888.449.4121.

Honored and privileged to serve more than 60 Ohio counties.

Ohio's Hospice at United Church Homes

Serving: Stark and Washington Counties

Administrative Office

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

Administrative Office

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

Ohio's Hospice | Cincinnati

Administrative Office

11013 Montgomery Rd.
Cincinnati, OH 45249
1.800.653.4490

Ohio's Hospice | Dayton

Serving: Logan, Champaign, Clark, Preble, Montgomery, Greene, Butler, Warren and Hamilton Counties

Inpatient Care Center

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

Administrative Office

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

Ohio's Hospice | Franklin/Middletown

Serving: Butler and Warren Counties

Inpatient Care Center

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

Ohio's Hospice | Marysville

Serving: Union and Madison Counties

Administrative Office

779 London Ave.
Marysville, OH 43040
Phone: 937.644.1928

Ohio's Hospice | Middleburg Heights

Administrative Office

18051 Jefferson Park Rd.
Middleburg Heights, OH 44130
1.833.444.4177

Ohio's Hospice | Mt. Gilead

Serving: Morrow County

Administrative Office

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

Ohio's Hospice | Newark

Serving: Crawford, Marion, Morrow, Knox, Coshocton, Delaware, Licking, Muskingum, Franklin, Fairfield, Perry and Hocking Counties

Administrative Office

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 at
Licking Memorial Hospital

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

Ohio's Hospice | Columbus

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

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

Ohio's Hospice | New Philadelphia

Serving: Tuscarawas, Stark, Carroll, Columbiana, Coshocton, Holmes Counties

Inpatient Care Center

716 Commercial Ave. SW
New Philadelphia, OH 44663
Phone: 330.343.7605

Ohio's Hospice | Springfield

Serving: Clark, Champaign and Logan Counties

Administrative Office

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

Ohio's Hospice | Troy

Serving: Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, Miami, Shelby, and Van Wert Counties

Inpatient Care Center

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

Ohio's Hospice | Washington Court House

Serving: Fayette, Clinton, Pickaway, Ross, Highland, Pike, Clermont, Brown and Adams Counties

Administrative Office

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

Ohio's Hospice | Wilmington

Serving: Clinton County

Administrative Office

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

Ohio's Hospice | Wooster

Serving: Cuyahoga, Lake, Geauga, Lorain, Medina, Summit, Richland, Ashland, Wayne, Stark, Holmes and Tuscarawas Counties

Inpatient Care Center

1900 Akron Rd.
Wooster, OH 44691
Phone: 330.264.4899

Women Work to Find a Better Way

Dame Cicely Saunders is recognized as the founder of the modern hospice care movement. In 1967, she established Saint Christopher’s in South East London, a hospice dedicated to serving patients at the end of life.

In the 1970s, Dame Saunders came to speak to a group of students at Yale University and as a result, a nurse and volunteer in Connecticut made the first home care visit to a hospice patient. Quickly, the ideals of hospice were adopted across the United States. Initially serving patients often in the home, hospice care primarily served those with cancer, ALS and other fatal diseases in the beginning phases of the hospice movement. With the onset of the AIDS crisis in the 1980s, hospice providers became pioneers in caring for those with advanced AIDS.

Here in central Ohio, Selma Markowitz became an advocate for hospice care after reading a magazine article about the purpose and impact of hospice care on an airplane flight home. Around the same time, Kathleen Brown cared for her dying husband and dying mother. She had no medical training and she felt there should be a better way to care for loved ones.

Each woman talked to Licking Memorial Hospital about the need to bring hospice care to the community. The hospital introduced them to one another and loaned them space to hold planning meetings with like-minded community volunteers, and hospice care in Licking County began.

1982 Selma Markowitz and Kathleen Brown 1983 Early Volunteers

In January 1982, nine community leaders and volunteers brought together by Selma Markowitz and Kathleen Brown first met to discuss end-of-life care in Licking County. Unlike most founders of community-based hospices, neither woman had a background in healthcare. By September 1982, the group legally formed Hospice Service of Licking County, Ohio, Inc., now known as Ohio’s Hospice of Central Ohio.

Throughout 1983, the committee developed a hospice care program and recruited volunteers to care for patients and families. Virginia Follmer, RN, was appointed the first executive director of Hospice Service of Licking County and Licking Memorial Hospital donated office space in the basement of the Wehrle Building. Selma Markowitz begged and borrowed office furniture and filing cabinets from members of the community and volunteers served as office staff to support the organization. As hospice care in Central Ohio became a more established care option, Newark Mayor Bill Moore issued a proclamation for Hospice Month in November.

Since the beginning, volunteers have been vital to the success of not-for-profit hospice care from care support to community education. Volunteers formed a Speaker’s Bureau to present hospice care to churches, businesses and organizations throughout the community. They shared their vision of hospice and explained how hospice care supports people who wish to die at home surrounded by family and friends.

1984 and 1985 Home visits and 1988 Jim Moss

Our first Hospice Service of Licking County patient was admitted on July 17, 1984, and 18 patients were served that year. The newly formed not-for-profit hospice’s intent was to not bill patients for hospice services and until 1985, all expenses were covered by the generosity of community donors. Then, the Medicare Hospice Benefit provided a regular source of reimbursement. Eventually, most health insurance companies offered hospice coverage as a benefit.

Hospice Service of Licking County achieved Ohio Department of Health licensure in 1985 and began offering respite care that was offered in a room at Licking Memorial Hospital. Kathy Ritter, RN, BSN, was appointed director of nursing and also assumed the duties of executive director. To keep up with the increase in patients, the organization hired part-time nurses to provide care in patients’ homes.

Jim Moss was appointed as the third executive director of Hospice Service of Licking County with the goal of making the organization a world-class organization. He had led a three-hospital healthcare group and was a former state president of the Ohio Hospital Association. A visionary, Jim made it possible for the organization to be on the cutting edge of technology at the time. He provided the staff with beepers, bag phones, and eventually, cell phones. Such technology made a huge difference for the staff and the operation, who spent most of their time in patients’ homes, and provided care and services 24/7.

Back To Top
Skip to content