Literature DB >> 31726016

Post-Intensive Care Unit Care. A Qualitative Analysis of Patient Priorities and Implications for Redesign.

Leslie P Scheunemann1,2, Jennifer S White3, Suman Prinjha4, Megan E Hamm5, Timothy D Girard6, Elizabeth R Skidmore3, Charles F Reynolds7, Natalie E Leland3.   

Abstract

Rationale: Although survival during critical illness is improving, little evidence exists to guide post-intensive care unit (ICU) care. Understanding patients' needs and priorities is fundamental to improving care quality.
Objectives: To describe the evolution of patients' priorities for recovery across the spectrum of post-ICU care.
Methods: This was a secondary analysis of 39 semistructured interviews conducted from 2005 to 2006 in participants' homes 19 days to 11 years after hospital discharge after critical illness. Adult critical illness survivors (N = 39) aged 20 years or older from multiple ICUs across the United Kingdom were purposively selected to maximize diversity with respect to time since diagnosis, disease severity, sex, age, ethnicity, socioeconomic group/status, region. age, ICU admitting diagnoses, and length of stay. We used the method of qualitative description to characterize patients' priorities for recovery and their evolution within and between individual patients across three post-ICU periods: ICU transition to wards, early period (approximately the first 2 mo) after discharge to home, and late period (>2 mo) after discharge to home.
Results: The analysis revealed 12 core patient priorities during recovery: feeling safe, being comfortable, engaging in mobility, participating in self-care, asserting personhood, connecting with people, ensuring family well-being, going home, restoring psychological health, restoring physical health, resuming previous roles and routines, and seeking new life experiences. In general, priorities evolved from those pertaining to basic survival during the stay on wards to being broader and more aspirational by the late postdischarge period.Conclusions: Understanding patients' priorities for post-ICU care is critical for developing stakeholder-driven clinical guidelines. Engaging other stakeholders (e.g., family members, healthcare providers, and institutionalized and frail older adults) to inform the development of clinical guidelines for post-ICU care, together with the barriers and facilitators faced in achieving patient- and family-centered care, is an important next step.

Entities:  

Keywords:  critical care outcomes; health services research; patient-centered care; patient-centered outcomes; stakeholder-driven clinical guidelines

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 31726016      PMCID: PMC6993800          DOI: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201904-332OC

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Am Thorac Soc        ISSN: 2325-6621


  54 in total

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Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2014-05       Impact factor: 7.598

5.  Re-building life after ICU: a qualitative study of the patients' perspective.

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8.  Embracing the new vulnerable self: A grounded theory approach on critical care survivors' post-intensive care syndrome.

Authors:  Jiyeon Kang; Yeon Jin Jeong
Journal:  Intensive Crit Care Nurs       Date:  2018-09-05       Impact factor: 3.072

9.  Surviving critical illness: what is next? An expert consensus statement on physical rehabilitation after hospital discharge.

Authors:  M E Major; R Kwakman; M E Kho; B Connolly; D McWilliams; L Denehy; S Hanekom; S Patman; R Gosselink; C Jones; F Nollet; D M Needham; R H H Engelbert; M van der Schaaf
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10.  Using secondary analysis of qualitative data of patient experiences of health care to inform health services research and policy.

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4.  Barriers and facilitators to resuming meaningful daily activities among critical illness survivors in the UK: a qualitative content analysis.

Authors:  Leslie Scheunemann; Jennifer S White; Suman Prinjha; Tammy L Eaton; Megan Hamm; Timothy D Girard; Charles Reynolds; Natalie Leland; Elizabeth R Skidmore
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-04-26       Impact factor: 3.006

  4 in total

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