POMONA, Calif. â When you first meet 17-month-old Aaron Martinez, itâs not obvious that something is catastrophically wrong.
What you see is a beautiful little boy with smooth, lustrous skin, an abundance of glossy brown hair, and a disarming smile. What you hear are coos and cries that donât immediately signal anything is horribly awry.
But his parents, Adriana Pinedo and Hector Martinez, know the truth painfully well.
Although Adrianaâs doctors and midwife had described the pregnancy as âperfectâ for all nine months, Aaron was born with most of his brain cells dead, the result of two strokes and a massive bleed he sustained while in utero.
Doctors arenât sure what caused the anomalies that left Aaron with virtually no cognitive function or physical mobility. His voluminous hair hides a head whose circumference is too small for his age. He has epilepsy that triggers multiple seizures each day, and his smile is not always what it seems. âIt could be a smile; it could be a seizure,â his mother said.
Shortly after Aaron was born, doctors told Adriana, 34, and Hector, 35, there was no hope and they should âlet nature take its course.â They would learn months later that the doctors had not expected the boy to live more than five days. It was on Day 5 that his parents put him in home hospice care, an arrangement that has continued into his second year of life.
The family gets weekly visits from hospice nurses, therapists, social workers, and a chaplain in the cramped one-bedroom apartment they rent from the people who live in the main house on the same lot on a quiet residential street in this Inland Empire city.

One of the main criteria for hospice care, largely for seniors but also applied to children, is a diagnosis of six months or less to live. Yet over the course of 17 months, Aaronâs medical team has repeatedly recertified his hospice eligibility.
Under of the 2010 Affordable Care Act, children enrolled in Medicaid or the Childrenâs Health Insurance Program are allowed, unlike adults, to be in hospice while continuing to receive curative or life-extending care. Commercial insurers are not required to cover this âconcurrent care,â but many now do.
More than a decade since its inception, concurrent care is widely credited with improving the quality of life for many terminally ill children, easing stress on the family and, in some cases, sustaining hope for a cure. But the arrangement can contribute to a painful dilemma for parents like Adriana and Hector, who are torn between their fierce commitment to their son and the futility of knowing that his condition leaves him with no future worth hoping for.
âWe could lose a life, but if he continues to live this way, weâll lose three,â said Adriana. âThereâs no quality of life for him or for us.â
Aaronâs doctors now say he could conceivably live for years. His body hasnât stopped growing since he was born. Heâs in the 96th percentile for height for his age, and his weight is about average.
His parents have talked about âgraduatingâ him from hospice. But he is never stable for long, and they welcome the visits from their hospice team. The seizures, sometimes 30 a day, are a persistent assault on his brain and, as he grows, the medications intended to control them must be changed or the doses recalibrated. He is at continual risk of gastrointestinal problems and potentially deadly fluid buildup in his lungs.
Adriana, who works from home for a nonprofit public health organization, spends much of her time with Aaron, while Hector works as a landscaper. She has chosen to live in the moment, she said, because otherwise her mind wanders to a future in which either âhe could die â or he wonât, and Iâll end up changing the diapers of a 40-year-old man.â Either of those, she said, âare going to suck.â
While cancer is one of the major illnesses afflicting children in hospice, many others, like Aaron, have rare congenital defects, severe neurological impairments, or uncommon metabolic deficiencies.Ěý
âWe have diseases that families tell us are one of 10 cases in the world,â said Dr. Glen Komatsu, medical director of Torrance-based TrinityKids Care, which provides home hospice services to Aaron and more than 70 other kids in Los Angeles and Orange counties.

In the years leading up to the ACAâs implementation, pediatric health advocates lobbied hard for the concurrent care provision. Without the possibility of life-extending care or hope for a cure, many parents refused to put their terminally ill kids in hospice, thinking it was tantamount to giving up on them. That meant the whole family missed out on the support hospice can provide, not just pain relief and comfort for the dying child, but emotional and spiritual care for parents and siblings under extreme duress.
TrinityKids Care, run by the large national Catholic health system Providence, doesnât just send nurses, social workers, and chaplains into homes. For patients able to participate, and their siblings, it also offers art and science projects, exercise classes, movies, and music. During the pandemic, these activities have been conducted via Zoom, and volunteers deliver needed supplies to the childrenâs homes.
The ability to get treatments that prolong their lives is a major reason children in concurrent care are more likely than adults to outlive the six-months-to-live diagnosis required for hospice.
âConcurrent care, by its very intention, very clearly is going to extend their lives, and by extending their lives theyâre no longer going to be hospice-eligible if you use the six-month life expectancy criteria,â said Dr. David Steinhorn, a pediatric intensive care physician in Virginia, who has helped develop numerous childrenâs hospice programs across the U.S.
Another factor is that kids, even sick ones, are simply more robust than many older people.
âSick kids are often otherwise healthy, except for one organ,â said Dr. Debra Lotstein, chief of the division of comfort and palliative care at Childrenâs Hospital Los Angeles. âThey may have cancer in their body, but their hearts are good and their lungs are good, compared to a 90-year-old who at baseline is just not as resilient.â
All of Aaron Martinezâs vital organs, except for his brain, seem to be working. âThere have been times when weâve brought him in, and the nurse looks at the chart and looks at him, and she canât believe itâs that child,â said his father, Hector.

When kids live past the six-month life expectancy, they must be recertified to stay in hospice. In many cases, Steinhorn said, he is willing to recertify his pediatric patients indefinitely.
Even with doctors advocating for them, itâs not always easy for children to get into hospice care. Most hospices care primarily for adults and are reluctant to take kids.
âThe hospice will say, âWe donât have the capacity to treat children. Our nurses arenât trained. Itâs different. We just canât do it,ââ said Lori Butterworth, co-founder of the Children's Hospice and Palliative Care Coalition of California in Watsonville. âThe other reason is not wanting to, because itâs existentially devastating and sad and hard.â
Finances also play a role. Home hospice care is paid at a set by Medicare â slightly over $200 a day for the first two months, about $161 a day after that â and it is typically the same for kids and adults. Children, particularly those with rare conditions, often require more intensive and innovative care, so the per diem doesnât stretch as far.
The concurrent care provision has made taking pediatric patients more viable for hospice organizations, Steinhorn and others said. Under the ACA, many of the expenses for certain medications and medical services can be shifted to the patientâs primary insurance, leaving hospices responsible for pain relief and comfort care.
Even so, the relatively small number of kids who die each year from protracted ailments hardly makes pediatric hospice an appealing line of business in an industry craving growth, especially one in which private equity investors are active and seeking a big payday.
In California, only 21 of 1,336 hospices reported having a specialized pediatric hospice program, and 59 said they served at least one patient under age 21, according to of 2020 state data by Cordt Kassner, CEO of Hospice Analytics in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Hospice providers that do cater to children often face a more basic challenge: Even with the possibility of concurrent care, many parents still equate hospice with acceptance of death. That was the case initially for Matt and Reese Sonnen, Los Angeles residents whose daughter, Layla, was born with a seizure disorder that had no name: Her brain had simply failed to develop in the womb, and an MRI showed âfluid taking up space where the brain wasnât,â her mother said.
When Laylaâs team first mentioned hospice, âI was in the car on my phone, and I almost crashed the car,â Reese recalled. âThe first thought that came to mind was, âIt is just the end,â but we felt she was nowhere near it, because she was strong, she was mighty. She was my little girl. She was going to get through this.â
About three months later, as Laylaâs nervous system deteriorated, causing her to writhe in pain, her parents agreed to enroll her in hospice with TrinityKids Care. She died weeks later, not long after her 2nd birthday. She was in her motherâs arms, with Matt close by.
âAll of a sudden, Layla breathed out a big rush of air. The nurse looked at me and said, âThat was her last breath.â I was literally breathing in her last breath,â Reese recounted. âI never wanted to breathe again, because now I felt I had her in my lungs. Donât make me laugh, donât make me exhale.â
Laylaâs parents have no regrets about their decision to put her in hospice. âIt was the absolute right decision, and in hindsight we should have done it sooner,â Matt said. âShe was suffering, and we had blinders on.â

Adriana Pinedo said she is âinfinitely gratefulâ for hospice, despite the heartache of Aaronâs condition. Sometimes the social worker will stop by, she said, just to say hello and drop off a latte, a small gesture that can feel very uplifting. âTheyâve been our lifeline,â she said.
Adriana talks about a friend of hers with a healthy baby, also named Aaron, who is pregnant with her second child. âAll the stuff that was on our list, theyâre living. And I love them dearly,â Adriana said. âBut itâs almost hard to look, because itâs like looking at the stuff that you didnât get. Itâs like Christmas Day, staring through the window at the neighborâs house, and youâre sitting there in the cold.â
Yet she seems palpably torn between that bleak remorse and the unconditional love parents feel toward their children. At one point, Adriana interrupted herself midsentence and turned to her son, who was in Hectorâs arms: âYes, Papi, you are so stinking cute, and you are still my dream come true.â
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