Advanced age, disability, and multiple chronic diseases pose challenges to medical care. How can we bring medical services to homes to bridge health care inequalities when our elders cannot go out for doctor visits? If medicine fails to work or if we the elderly want to return to their roots, how can we help these folks fulfill their wishes? The author is the first local government-funded student on Penghu who specializes in palliative care. He also actively promotes home-based medical care. How he wants to be taken care of in the future must be coincide with corresponding medical services now. This article shares several current key businesses, such as palliative care, home-based medical care, hospice care in institution, Patient Right to Autonomy Act promotion, etc., to build an organic care network so that folks can live a good life and die locally. Nowadays, the hospice coverage rate has increased, as well as the proportion of non-cancer cases, and some such cases can also die at home or institutions.