| Literature DB >> 29301555 |
Daren K Heyland1,2,3, Judy Davidson4, Yoanna Skrobik5, Amanda Roze des Ordons6, Lauren J Van Scoy7, Andrew G Day8, Virginia Vandall-Walker9,10, Andrea P Marshall11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Over the last decade, health care delivery has shifted to partnering with patients and their families to improve health and quality of care, and to lower costs. Partnering with family members (FMs) of critically ill patients who lack capacity is particularly important for improving experiences and outcomes for both patients and FMs. How best to apply such partnering strategies, however, is yet unknown. The IMPACT trial will evaluate two interventions that enable partnerships with families of critically ill patients, each in a distinct content area, but similar in that they empower and support FMs.Entities:
Keywords: Critical care; End of life decision-making; Nutrition; Patient and family engagement; Randomized trial; Supportive care
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29301555 PMCID: PMC5753514 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-2379-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Conceptual model of family engagement in the intensive care unit (ICU). Many factors impact medical decisions for a patient. Patient factors include the patient as a person and their medical condition. Patient as a person represents the person’s prior experiences, values, preferences and goals. Environmental factors include the health care environment situated within a larger societal context. Family members may engage in care or decision-making. The family’s role in care gives purpose in crisis and may help family members cope with the exposure to critical illness. Their direct participation may also improve patient adherence to treatment plan and attainment of treatment goals. In shared decision-making the family is engaged as a member of the health care team. The family is typically most familiar with the patient as a person and the patient’s past health status. The clinicians are typically most knowledgeable of the patient’s critical illness. The decision-support intervention is designed to facilitate communication between the family and clinicians about the patient as a person and their medical condition. Family engagement in this manner facilitates a shared medical decision that is consistent with the patient’s values and goals in the context of their illness experience and medical condition, and is congruent with what the patient would choose if they were competent to make such a decision. Thus, we hypothesize that family engagement can influence family response to critical illness, and also the treatment plan. Ultimately, both patient and family outcomes are optimized
Fig. 2Post-intensive care syndrome among families of intensive care unit (ICU) survivors. Reprinted with permission from Springer [20]
Fig. 3Study overview
Fig. 4Timeline of the interventions
Components of the ICU Workbook – the decision-support intervention
| Section | Description |
|---|---|
| 1. Orientation and education about the ICU | • Provides a general overview of the intensive care unit (ICU) including key ICU terms, treatments, and roles of various clinicians who work in the ICU. |
| 2. When a loved one is in the ICU | • Provides suggestions for coping strategies for family members of an ICU patient. |
| 3. Looking after yourself | • Reinforces the importance of self-care for families of ICU patients. |
| 4. Making decisions in the ICU | • Describes and encourages shared decision-making. |
| 5. Help us to get to know you and your family member | • Family directed questionnaire asking information about the patient’s personal characteristics. |
| 6. Informational preferences | • Identifies family member’s desire for information and level of health literacy. |
| 7. Values history tool | • Assesses patients’ values and preferences (as reported by family members). |
| 8. Decision preferences | • Elicits family member’s preferences for extent of information sharing and preferred role in decision-making |
Outcomes considered in the IMPACT protocol program of research
| Process measures | Short-term (hospital) outcomesa (current phase II) | Long-term (months following hospital discharge) outcomes (future phase III) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nutritional intervention | Compliance with the intervention Met with dietitian early in ICU stay and at ICU discharge to review materials Received a nutrition plan at ICU and ward discharge Used nutrition audit tool | Nutritional adequacy during ICU stay Consumption of Oral Nutritional Supplements during hospital stay Intake on hospital wards (3-day calorie count) Hand-grip strength at or before hospital discharge | Measures of patient’s long-term physical recovery (e.g., 6 MWD at 3 and 6 months) |
| Decision-support intervention | Compliance with the intervention Met with RC early and went through the myicuguide website Family meeting to review intervention output within 72 h of encounter Patient-centered report from MyICUGuide on chart during ICU and hospital stay and attending physician aware of contents of this report | Use of shared-decision making (OPTIONa tool) during initial family conference Change in decisional conflict at 1 week Family satisfaction with decision-making at ICU discharge (or 2–3 weeks later for decedents) | Measure of family member’s long-term psychological well-being Length of ICU and hospital stay for decedents |
| Other | Contamination (families exposed to an intervention to which they were not assigned) Exposed to myicuguide website Exposed to OPTICs content | Overall family satisfaction with ICU care at ICU discharge (or 2–3 weeks later for decedents) |
Table of current and projected outcomes for the IMPACT program of research
aAll outcomes listed in this column will be measured in all randomized patients
6MWD, 6-minute walk distance, ICU intensive care unit
Additional outcomes for the IMPACT trial
| Parameter | Defined as… |
|---|---|
| Enrollment and consent rate | We will judge the current study protocol feasible if > 75% of eligible families of eligible patients are approached and > 60% of these consent. |
| Compliance with the components of the OPTICs intervention. | The dietitian will keep a log of all FMs with whom the OPTICs intervention materials were reviewed, the time the intervention was delivered, and whether a nutrition plan was presented at the end of the ICU stay (survivors only) and ward stay. At baseline, the review of these materials should occur in > 90% of enrolled FMs and the nutrition plan should be presented in > 75% of eligible cases for this to be considered feasible. |
| Compliance with the components of the family directed decision-support intervention | Review of the website should occur in 100% of the FMs enrolled in this group, and the family meeting (including the enrolled FM) should occur within 72 h in > 75% of cases for this intervention to be considered feasible. In addition, the RC will perform a chart review after ICU death or discharge for all enrolled patients and document evidence that the components of the decision-support intervention were included in the medical record. We will consider the protocol successful if > 75% of charts contained such evidence. |
| Physician Awareness Assessment | One week after enrollment, the RC will administer the Physician’s Awareness Assessment to the attending physician and/or fellow responsible for the care of the patient during the period of enrollment to assess the extent to which they were aware of study materials, the variables captured in the study intervention output (nutritional history, patient pre-morbid functional state, values, preferences, etc.) and the degree to which this knowledge influenced their decision-making. If > 75% of them acknowledge exposure to study tools and rate their impact as substantial, in the respective interventional groups, the intervention will be considered feasible. |
| Contamination | We will ask all FMs whether they have had a facilitated review of the myicuguide website and OPTICs tools. If < 10% of the families of patients in the usual care group acknowledge that they have seen the study tools and if < 10% of the intervention groups acknowledge they have been exposed to the other intervention, we will consider this acceptable. |
FM family member, RC research coordinator, ICU intensive care unit