| Literature DB >> 27708798 |
Abstract
AIM: To scope systematically and collate qualitative studies on family experience and need during end of life care in intensive care, from the perspective of family members.Entities:
Keywords: end of life; family experience; family need; intensive care; scoping review
Year: 2015 PMID: 27708798 PMCID: PMC5047309 DOI: 10.1002/nop2.14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Open ISSN: 2054-1058
Scoping review criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
|
English language studies Papers published after 1995 Studies on adult patients/care settings Studies involving end of life care/bereavement All qualitative research: primary, secondary data |
Non‐English language studies Papers published prior to 1995 Studies in neonatal and children care settings Studies involving brain stem death Biomedical data (e.g. drug trials, clinical trials) Quantitative research papers, opinion and commentary pieces, retrospective audit data review; individual patient case presentation |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram
End of life care scoping review – publication source
| Publication source | No. of articles | Publication year(s) |
|---|---|---|
| American Journal of Critical Care | 4 | 1998, 2002, 2003, 2006 |
| American Journal of Hospital & Palliative Medicine | 1 | 2009 |
| Critical Care Medicine | 1 | 2002 |
| Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America | 1 | 2002 |
| Critical Care Nursing Quarterly | 2 | 2002, 2012 |
| Heart and Lung | 1 | 1996 |
| Journal of General Internal Medicine | 1 | 2012 |
| Intensive and Critical Care Nursing | 1 | 2009 |
| Journal of Clinical Ethics | 1 | 2005 |
| Journal of Clinical Nursing | 1 | 2008 |
| Journal of Palliative Medicine | 1 | 2008 |
| Oncology Nursing Forum | 1 | 2007 |
Papers included in scoping review
| Author(s) | Purpose | Study population | Methods | Key findings from original study |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Swigart | Describe the process of family decision‐making about life support. | 30 family members of critically ill patients in one US ICU. | Descriptive prospective exploratory involving interviews, field notes and recorded family conferences. | Key inter‐related areas: understanding and reframing critical illness; reviewing and revising life story of the patient; maintaining family roles and relationships. |
| Jacob ( | Describe and explain family experiences when involved in decisions making in ICU. | 17 adult family members involved in treatment withholding/limitation decisions in one US hospital. | Qualitative study using grounded theory method. Semi‐structured interviews occurring 1 week – 15 months into bereavement. | Major themes: Arriving at a judgement; moving in concert or disharmony; looking back and going on. |
| Abbott | Identify psychological support and areas of conflict for families of ICU patients during treatment withdrawal/withhold in ICU. | 48 family members in one US hospital. | Mixed method study. Sample identified prospectively but approach to relatives occurred 18–22 months after hospitalization. Descriptive demographic data and semi‐structured interview used. | 46% of families reported family conflict in ICU. Health care staff perceived to be disrespectful of family members requests. 92% of families involved in decision‐making. Spiritual support important. |
| Counsell and Guin ( | Understand family needs during withdrawal of life support in the critically ill. | 20 family members in medical ICU in one US hospital. | Descriptive design. Prospective sample identification. Telephone semi‐structured interview 3–5 weeks into bereavement. | Key needs: communication with family; access to quiet places; patient monitors to remain on during dying process; patient to look peaceful. |
| Kirchhoff | Obtain detailed picture of the experiences of family members during the hospitalization and death of a loved one in the ICU. | 8 family members from 8 ICUs in 2 US hospitals. Critically ill population under 55 years of age not included. | Qualitative design. Retrospective sample identification (6–18 months bereavement). Observed and taped focus groups included. Semi‐structured interview guide used. Content analysis used. | Key concept of experience as a vortex with issues of uncertainty; individual versus technological choice; responsibility to protect; staff and patient communication raised. |
| Warren ( | Explore critical care family members’ experiences of bereavement. | 23 family members from one US ICU. | Heideggerian hermeneutic phenomenology. Semi‐structured interviews used. All participants bereaved within previous 12 months. | Helpful (e.g. information; unrestricted visiting) and unhelpful (e.g. Dr not available, not being present at death) experiences identified. |
| Norton | Examine and describe communication difficulties from the perspectives of family members during withdrawal of life support. | 20 family members from four tertiary care hospitals in the US. | Secondary analysis from larger study. Bereaved contacted 7–10 days after the death and interviewed 1–2 months later and then 6 months later. Semi‐structured interview used. | Unmet communication needs highlighted: give us information; just be straight with us; talk to us in lay terms; get us together as a team; listen to us. |
| Chamber‐Evans and Carnevale ( | Understand experiences of surrogates involved in making end of life decisions for a family member in an ICU. | 8 surrogate decision makers in one Canadian hospital. | Prospective phenomenological study. Primary interview to gather data with second interview to check reliability. | Four themes: did I do the right thing; the struggle to set aside one's own convictions; the struggle to hold onto the whole story of the patient; maintain the dignity and identity of the patient. |
| McHale Wiegand ( | Describe interactions/experiences between family members, healthcare providers and the healthcare system. | 19 families (56 family members) from 3 ICUs in a US hospital. | Secondary analysis from a larger interpretive phenomenological study involving prospective interviews with families. Descriptive phenomenology using van Manen's approach. | Key themes described: issues with health care providers (importance of relationships with staff, communication) and issues related to the hospital system (parking, privacy). |
| Limerick ( | Understand processes used by surrogate decision makers who have chosen to withhold and withdraw life‐sustaining measures in ICUs. | 17 surrogates in across a Catholic managed multihospital ( | Grounded theory design. Retrospective approach to surrogates. Semi‐structured interview guide used. Thematic analysis with axial coding. | 3 domains used to represent decision‐making process: personal (e.g. rallying family support); ICU environment (e.g. developing relationships with staff); decision (arriving at new belief). |
| Meeker and Jezewski ( | Synthesize findings from investigations of family experience in decision to withdraw and/or withhold life‐sustaining treatment. | Metasynthesis of 13 qualitative studies described in 14 research reports and 3 dissertations published 1995–2007. Originated from US team. | Key search words included: life‐support care; withholding treatment; decision‐making. Intensive or critical care not used. Constant comparison technique and matrix mapping used. | Major categories: reframing reality involving cues and information; relating to care providers and family; integrating concerned with reconciling and going on. |
| Wiegand ( | Understand lived experience of families participating during withdrawal of life‐sustaining therapy in family member. | 19 families (56 family members) from 3 ICU in a US hospital. | Secondary analysis from a larger interpretive phenomenological study involving prospective interviews with families. Descriptive phenomenology using van Manen's approach. | Main categories: this happens to other families; time to understand; time to see; rising a roller coaster; family readiness; willingness to consider; one step at a time; time to make a decision; family will go on; waiting for a miracle. |
| Fridh | Explore close relatives’ experiences of caring when a loved one dies in an ICU. | 17 close relatives of 15 adult patients who died in three ICUs in Sweden. | Phenomenological‐hermeneutic method. Open unstructured interview occurred 2·5–5 months after the death. Structural analysis undertaken. | Key themes: being confronted with loss; maintaining a vigil; trusting the care; adapting; facing death; need for privacy; experiencing reconciliation. |
| Radwany | Provide understanding of family experiences and emotional burden surrounding end of life decision‐making. | 23 bereaved family members in one US ICU. All involved in a family conference led by palliative care services. | In‐depth semi‐structured interviews. Grounded theory guided data analysis. | Key temporal stages identified: the illness experience; decision‐making in the family meeting; the dying process. Three themes associated with emotional burden: lingering questions; resentment about care; feelings of guilt. |
| Gutierrez ( | Explore experiences and needs of family members for prognostic communication at end of life. | 20 family members of patients in one ICU in a US hospital. | Prospective sample selection. Semi‐structured interviews with some follow‐up interviews. Content analysis used. | Five these of information‐related work: hearing and recalling; accessing; interpreting; retaining; utilizing information. |
| Schenker | Characterize key intrapersonal tension experienced by surrogate decision makers in ICU. | 30 surrogates from 5 ICUs at two US hospitals. | Prospective qualitative study. In‐depth semi‐structured interviews. Constant comparative technique used in analysis. | Intrapersonal tension around: responsibility for a loved one's death; chance of recovery; family well‐being. Five behaviours identified as coping mechanisms including sharing/delaying decision‐making and storytelling. |