| Literature DB >> 27782830 |
Mohamed D Hashem1,2, Aparna Nallagangula1,2, Swaroopa Nalamalapu1,2, Krishidhar Nunna1,2, Utkarsh Nausran1, Karen A Robinson3, Victor D Dinglas1,2, Dale M Needham1,2,4, Michelle N Eakin5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is growing interest in patient outcomes following critical illness, with an increasing number and different types of studies conducted, and a need for synthesis of existing findings to help inform the field. For this purpose we conducted a systematic review of qualitative studies evaluating patient outcomes after hospital discharge for survivors of critical illness.Entities:
Keywords: Critical illness; Patient outcomes; Qualitative research; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27782830 PMCID: PMC5080744 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1516-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Study characteristics
| Study | Country | Total number | Number of male patients (%) | Age (years)a | Number of time points | Type of interviewee | Outcomes focused on | Data collection method | Data collection mode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Russell [ | Australia | 298 | – | – | 1 | Patient and caregiver/proxy | Patient | Telephone/in person | Interview |
| Maddox et al. [ | Australia | 5 | 2 (40 %) | 60 [42–76] | NA | Patient and caregiver/proxy | Patient and caregiver/proxy | In person | Interview |
| Papathanassoglou and Patiraki [ | Greece | 8 | 3 (38 %) | – | 3 | Patient | Patient | In person | Interview |
| Williams [ | UK | 11 | – | – | 2 | Patient | Patient | In person | Interview |
| Talisayon et al. [ | Australia | 5 | 4 (80 %) | 50 (20) | NA | Patient | Patient | In person | Interview/mixed |
| Storli et al. [ | Norway | 10 | 4 (40 %) | 46 [28–70] | NA | Patient | Patient | In person | Interview |
| Sawdon et al. [ | UK | – | – | – | 1 | Patient and caregiver/proxy | Patient and caregiver/proxy | Telephone/in person | Interview |
| Ramsay et al. [ | UK | 20 | 11 (57 %) | 61 (49–71) | 1 | Patient | Patient | In person | Interview |
| Prinjha et al. [ | UK | 34 | 20 (59 %) | 52 (14) | NA | Patient | Patient | In person | Interview |
| Pattison et al. [ | UK | 22 | 8 (36 %) | 59 (12.9) | 2 | Patient | Patient | Email interviews | Interview/mixed methods |
| Hall-Smith et al. [ | UK | 26 | – | – | 1 | Patient | Patient | In person | Interview |
| Walker et al. [ | UK | 16 | 11(69 %) | 43 (14.8) | 1 | Patient | Patient | In person | Focus groups |
| Ewens et al. [ | Australia | 18 | 9 (50 %) | [34–84] | 3 | Patient | Patient and caregiver/proxy | Interview | |
| Deacon [ | Multiple countries | 35 | 5 (14 %) | 48 (9.79) | NA | Patient | Patient | Online questionnaire | – |
| Czerwonka et al. [ | Canada | 5 | 3 (60 %) | – | 5 | Patient and caregiver/proxy | Patient | Telephone/in person | Interview |
| Corrigan et al. [ | Sweden | 14 | 3 (21 %) | 52 [42–74] | 2 | Patient | Patient | In person | Interview |
| Chiang [ | China | 4 | 3 (75 %) | 67.5 (9.86) | 1 | Patient and caregiver/proxy | Patient and caregiver/proxy | In person | Interview |
| Chahraoui et al. [ | France | 20 | 9 (45 %) | 68 (8.5) | 1 | Patient | Patient | In person | Interview |
| Agård et al. [ | Denmark | 18 | 11(61 %) | 55 (12.29) | 2 | Patient and caregiver/proxy | Patient | In person | Focus groups and interview |
| Adamson et al. [ | Australia | 6 | 4 (67 %) | 64 [57–83] | 1 | Patient and caregiver/proxy | Patient | In person | Interview |
| Abdalrahim and Zeilani [ | Jordan | 18 | 7 (39 %) | 53 (15.6) | 1 | Patient | Patient | In person | Interview |
| Ewens et al. [ | Australia | 1 | 1 (100 %) | 37 | 2 | Patient | Patient | In person | Interview |
aData presented as mean (standard deviation), as median (interquartile range), or as median [absolute range]
NA not applicable because the study was not longitudinal, – not reported
Fig. 1Domains adapted from the Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS). Definitions adapted from http://www.nihpromis.com/measures/domainframework1; and https://www.healthypeople.gov/2020/topics-objectives/topic/health-related-quality-of-life-well-being
Qualitative themes of satisfaction with life
| Theme | Example quote(s) |
|---|---|
| Positive outlook | 1. “I have got such a different outlook on life … I’ll have the odd day where I will dwell a bit … but everyday is a new day and its a beautiful day … I’m a different person.” |
| Acceptance | “You live with what you’ve got—–that is the attitude I took. Alright I’m sick and I’ve got this and I’ve got that. I can’t do this and maybe I won’t be able to do that, so you adjust and you move on.” |
| Gratitude | 1. “I try to cram in as much living as I can, because it could all end tomorrow …” |
| Independence | “It's great in a way [being back at home) because you have to do things on your own. And then you start getting stronger and you take your rest breaks, and you do it again, and you do get assistance, you would need the assistance like for grocery shopping and stuff like that. But as time goes by you start getting stronger.” |
| Boredom | “… that’s the worst thing about coming out of hospital, sitting doing nothing …” |
| Loneliness/isolation | “I do not enjoy being with people, usually I keep silent. I don’t want to be with them or to share their talks … They asked a lot … They asked about being in the unit … I feel that they sympathize with me … I do not want to remember that time.” |
| Wish they had not lived | “Sometimes in the evenings I’ve thought to myself … ‘hell, it would have been better to have slipped away’ … then you feel nothing.” |
Qualitative themes of mental health conditions/symptoms
| Theme | Example quote(s) |
|---|---|
| Post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms | 1. “I often wake up terrified because I had dreams of being in the unit with all the sounds and noises of machines. Even when I’m awake and with people, many things remind me of the unit, people talking, and images from the TV.” |
| Anxiety | 1. “I was having these major panic attacks when I arrived in Cardiology and I’m still having them, even now that I’m home, it’s often in the evening, every evening I get really panicky.” |
| Depression | “There are still days even, what are we six, seven months on now, yeah I just couldn't see the point of anything … in my mind I was thinking ‘Well what's the point of it, we're all going to die anyway?’ And I needed to speak to, I went back and spoke to the nurse consultant on ICU and she explained it’s perfectly normal. And that helped, once she said to me, ‘Loads of people feel like that when they come out of intensive care and you need to be kind and give yourself a bit of time, it will pass.’” |
| Irritability/anger | 1. “I am now beginning to get frustrated with the things I still cannot do … I am finding it increasingly difficult mentally to cope with my recovery.” |
| General emotional functioning | 1. “I cried for the slightest reason … it … only took the smallest setback.” |
Qualitative themes of physical health
| Theme | Example quote(s) |
|---|---|
| Mobility | 1. “I can move now, before, I thought I will stay handicapped all my life. But never mind, I feel grateful just to have the ability to walk again …” |
| Activities of daily living | 1. “My day-to-day life is anything but normal. I want to be able to cook, clean and do the gardening, walk to the shops … recovery has been reasonable.” |
| Fatigue | 1. “I probably went too far. I mean, I was at home and tried to arrange that my husband didn’t need to come home and do things. But then I was tired and couldn’t handle it anyway.” |
| Appetite | “Now it’s going ok again, I’m eating well, and I’m sleeping so well! I feel better, even better than before …, a little frustration at not having an appetite and my insides not really knowing where they should be ….” |
| Sensory changes | “I also have double vision … I can’t read … I can’t even watch telly … it’s like being in prison.” |
| Muscle weakness | “The most difficult bit was … I felt it took forever before I regained my strength. I just deposited my physical strength at the hospital and I still feel it. I mean, I don’t feel I am up to my usual strength yet … I feel that I need more strength to open the lid of a jar of jam. I was actually quite strong before I got sick.” |
| Sleep disturbances | 1. “I slept so badly, I had these awful dreams, really horrible …”; “It’s incredible to wake up all of a sudden only to find that, well, everything’s OK, and you wake up anyway just to check …” |
Qualitative themes of social health and ability to participate in social roles and activities
| Theme | Example quote(s) |
|---|---|
| Social roles, activities, or relationships | |
| Changes in friends or family relationships | 1. “I’m happy being back home, but I feel that my kids do not need me anymore. They use to take my opinion in every aspect of their lives, I can’t find this anymore. Now they consult their mother, and act as if I’m still in hospital.” |
| Ability to participate in social roles and activities | |
| Hobbies | “It was important for me to get back to a normal life, to paint or put up wallpaper or other stuff like that …” |
| Disability | “I was a mechanic … I can’t do it now. I’m not allowed to drive a car or get on a plane, they won’t let me do anything.” |