Diane Bush, CNA
Diane J. Bush brings a deep commitment to individualized, compassionate care as the owner of Your Final Journey. With a career defined by attentive listening, respectful partnership, and practical problem-solving, Diane creates a safe, dignified environment where patients and families feel seen and supported. Her approach blends clinical competence with warmth: she prioritizes clear communication, collaborative care planning, and thoughtful follow-through to ensure needs are met holistically.
Throughout her career, Diane earned Employee of the Year honors and numerous recognitions from clients and family members who cite her reliability, patience, and willingness to do whatever it takes for better outcomes. Those accolades reflect her belief that quality care extends beyond clinical tasks to include emotional support, advocacy, and coordination with interdisciplinary teams.
At Your Final Journey, Diane offers flexible, individualized services that honor each person’s goals and values—whether supporting transitions of care, chronic condition management, or short-term recovery. Her practice emphasizes dignity, empathy, and practical solutions, partnering closely with patients and loved ones to promote comfort, independence, and wellbeing.
Guided by a strong sense of purpose, Diane is dedicated to making each stage of the healthcare journey as seamless and meaningful as possible. She remains committed to continuous learning and adapting to the evolving needs of those she serves, ensuring her care remains both relevant and impactful. By fostering trust, open communication, and genuine human connection, Diane empowers individuals and families to navigate complex health decisions with confidence, clarity, and peace of mind.
• Manchester Community College - Associate's degree, Legal Assistant/Paralegal
• CNA
• Creates memorial scrapbooks for families who have lost loved ones
Areas of Specialization/Expertise
- Hospice
- Medical Aid in Dying
- End-of-Life Care
What do you enjoy most about practicing medicine?
What I love most about this work is the dignity and choice it gives people at the end of their lives. Somebody could say 'I'm gonna do this,' they get two medical approvals, they pass the psych eval, and they have the medicine mixed up in their hands - but they can still say no, they can change their mind. That's really important to me. I also love that patients can plan their final days exactly how they want - whether it's a small, quaint gathering with family and a few friends, or a huge party on a Saturday where all the family and friends get together with no clue what's going on, but it's the patient's way of a final hoorah with everybody. Then they can just say 'I'm a little tired,' go into a separate room, and that's where they can ingest the medicine on their own terms. My philosophy has always been that when I go into homes, I treat you and your family as I would treat my parents.