Bernard P Chang1. 1. Department of Emergency Medicine, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY, United States of America. Electronic address: bpc2103@cumc.columbia.edu.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Hospitalization places patients at elevated risk for the development of "nosocomial" or hospital acquired complications, ranging from multidrug resistant infections to delirium and physical deconditioning. Adverse nosocomial psychological effects of hospitalization may also exist. This paper introduces a nosocomial based stress model, conceptualizing hospitalization as a unique period of biopsychosocial vulnerability, due to physiologic effects of acute illness and psychosocial variables of the hospital experience. METHOD: A research synthesis and narrative review was performed to evaluate evidence supporting this model, integrating existing knowledge of the psychological and physiological effects of acute life threatening events, with known sequelae associated with hospitalization. RESULT: Psychosocial factors during hospitalization may act as independent predictors of recovery following hospitalization, moderating variables impacting ongoing physiologic changes due to acute illness, and/or dynamic bidirectional elements, influencing medical and psychological outcomes in the near and long-term setting. CONCLUSION: The Nosocomial Stress model provides a novel framework to understanding the biopsychosocial interactions between the psychological and physiologic processes associated with illness and hospitalization. Based on this model, a research agenda is proposed to assess the contributions of acute illness, the hospital experience, and their interactions on the recovery of patients following hospitalization.
OBJECTIVE: Hospitalization places patients at elevated risk for the development of "nosocomial" or hospital acquired complications, ranging from multidrug resistant infections to delirium and physical deconditioning. Adverse nosocomial psychological effects of hospitalization may also exist. This paper introduces a nosocomial based stress model, conceptualizing hospitalization as a unique period of biopsychosocial vulnerability, due to physiologic effects of acute illness and psychosocial variables of the hospital experience. METHOD: A research synthesis and narrative review was performed to evaluate evidence supporting this model, integrating existing knowledge of the psychological and physiological effects of acute life threatening events, with known sequelae associated with hospitalization. RESULT: Psychosocial factors during hospitalization may act as independent predictors of recovery following hospitalization, moderating variables impacting ongoing physiologic changes due to acute illness, and/or dynamic bidirectional elements, influencing medical and psychological outcomes in the near and long-term setting. CONCLUSION: The Nosocomial Stress model provides a novel framework to understanding the biopsychosocial interactions between the psychological and physiologic processes associated with illness and hospitalization. Based on this model, a research agenda is proposed to assess the contributions of acute illness, the hospital experience, and their interactions on the recovery of patients following hospitalization.
Authors: Matthew White; Donald Edmondson; Redeana Umland; Gabriel Sanchez; Bernard P Chang Journal: Am J Emerg Med Date: 2016-10-25 Impact factor: 2.469
Authors: Matthew White; Donald Edmondson; Redeana Umland; Gabriel Sanchez; Bernard P Chang Journal: Am J Emerg Med Date: 2017-05-02 Impact factor: 2.469
Authors: T Hensler; C D Heidecke; H Hecker; K Heeg; H Bartels; N Zantl; H Wagner; J R Siewert; B Holzmann Journal: J Immunol Date: 1998-09-01 Impact factor: 5.422
Authors: Paul I Musey; Roma Patel; Colin Fry; Guadalupe Jimenez; Rachael Koene; Jeffrey A Kline Journal: Am J Cardiol Date: 2018-07-05 Impact factor: 2.778
Authors: Harlan M Krumholz; Angela Hsieh; Rachel P Dreyer; John Welsh; Nihar R Desai; Kumar Dharmarajan Journal: PLoS One Date: 2016-10-07 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Bernard P Chang; Talea Cornelius; Joshua Willey; Donald Edmondson; Mitchell Sv Elkind; Ian M Kronish Journal: Emerg Med J Date: 2020-01-28 Impact factor: 2.740
Authors: María Del Carmen Pérez-Fuentes; María Del Mar Molero Jurado; África Martos Martínez; Jose Jesús Gázquez Linares Journal: PLoS One Date: 2020-06-25 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Ambrose H Wong; Maria L Pacella-LaBarbara; Jessica M Ray; Megan L Ranney; Bernard P Chang Journal: Ann Emerg Med Date: 2020-05-03 Impact factor: 5.721
Authors: Ari Shechter; Franchesca Diaz; Nathalie Moise; D Edmund Anstey; Siqin Ye; Sachin Agarwal; Jeffrey L Birk; Daniel Brodie; Diane E Cannone; Bernard Chang; Jan Claassen; Talea Cornelius; Lilly Derby; Melissa Dong; Raymond C Givens; Beth Hochman; Shunichi Homma; Ian M Kronish; Sung A J Lee; Wilhelmina Manzano; Laurel E S Mayer; Cara L McMurry; Vivek Moitra; Patrick Pham; LeRoy Rabbani; Reynaldo R Rivera; Allan Schwartz; Joseph E Schwartz; Peter A Shapiro; Kaitlin Shaw; Alexandra M Sullivan; Courtney Vose; Lauren Wasson; Donald Edmondson; Marwah Abdalla Journal: Gen Hosp Psychiatry Date: 2020-06-16 Impact factor: 7.587