
The deal illustrates accelerating consolidation among nonprofit hospice providers, strengthening financial resilience and expanding access to home‑based care in a market facing workforce shortages and regulatory pressure.
The hospice and home‑care sector has entered a period of rapid consolidation, as nonprofit operators seek scale to offset rising labor costs and increasingly complex reimbursement rules. Chapters Health System, one of the nation’s largest nonprofit hospice networks, has pursued a series of strategic affiliations—including Chapters Health West in 2025—to broaden its geographic reach across the West Coast and the Eastern Seaboard. By adding new partners, Chapters can leverage shared infrastructure, negotiate better payer contracts, and spread best‑practice models across its 30‑organization portfolio, positioning itself for long‑term viability.
In Oregon, Housecall Providers brings a mature three‑county hospice operation, a five‑county palliative program and emerging home‑based primary care services. The affiliation with Chapters will give Housecall immediate access to a larger pool of clinicians, advanced telehealth platforms, and centralized procurement of durable medical equipment. For patients, the merger promises smoother transitions between hospice, palliative and primary care, while the combined entity can address the region’s chronic workforce shortages through joint recruitment and training initiatives. Importantly, the organizations have pledged continuity of care, avoiding service interruptions during the integration phase.
Beyond the state level, the partnership signals a broader shift toward sustainable, community‑focused models of serious‑illness care. Nonprofit health systems are increasingly positioning themselves as custodians of high‑quality, compassionate services that for‑profit players may deem less profitable. By aligning with Chapters, Housecall Providers taps into a national brand that can attract philanthropic support and policy advocacy, while Chapters deepens its presence in the Pacific Northwest, a market with growing demand for home‑based services. Observers will watch how this affiliation influences payer negotiations, quality metrics, and the competitive landscape for hospice providers nationwide.
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