“My parents felt like — my family felt like — they were there 24/7 for us,” she said in a phone call to the Gazette-Times. “I could call first thing in the morning, the middle of the night, and somebody would be there for me and my parents.”
The Corvallis-based organization provided at-home chaplain visits, massages and other services "that are just above and beyond the basic hospice service” to soothe her ailing parents. At a very dark time, Scoville said, Lumina “changed their lives and our lives so we could focus on being a family.”
“I think we’re at this very interesting time where we have this very strong history and foundation,” said Lumina Executive Director Elizabeth French in the phone call with Scoville. “We want to be able to continue those (pre-existing services). But we also want to be able to serve more patients within, frankly, a bigger scope.”