Literature DB >> 33977347

"It was a nightmare until I saw my wife": the importance of family presence for patients with COVID-19 hospitalized in the ICU.

Nancy Kentish-Barnes1, Philonille Degos2, Clémence Viau2, Frédéric Pochard2,3, Elie Azoulay2.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33977347      PMCID: PMC8112738          DOI: 10.1007/s00134-021-06411-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Intensive Care Med        ISSN: 0342-4642            Impact factor:   17.440


× No keyword cloud information.
Dear Editor, During the initial pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), visits in the intensive care unit (ICU) were either banned or highly restricted. Consequently, family members and patients were often separated from each other. Quantitative and qualitative research has shown that this restriction was an extremely difficult and even harmful experience for both family members and ICU clinicians [1, 2]. Lack of visits is a well-known risk factor for delirium [3] and studies have shown that extending visiting policies can strongly reduce both the incidence of delirium and its length [4]. In this qualitative pilot study that included semi-structured interviews with 12 ICU survivors of the COVID-19 9–10 months after their discharge, we sought to better understand the experience of patients’ hospitalization in the ICU during the first wave of the pandemic (Supplemental material). Qualitative analysis provides an in-depth insight into the relationship between the patient and his loved-one in the ICU, although our data may not precisely translate how patients actually felt in the moment, given a potential for recall bias and the effect of media exposure between the ICU stay and the interviews. Most patients (9/12) reported having no memories of their ICU admission: their first memory was gaining consciousness after their coma (due to sedation for mechanical ventilation). Patients described being agitated and confused, not knowing whether their dreams were reality or not (Table 1, Q1). Many patients described terrifying dreams during which they thought they were going to die (Table 1, Q2). ICU delirium is well described and can cause patients to have horrifying, violent hallucinations to the point where they feel that they are going crazy. In our study, patients described not knowing where they were and having no familiar faces to reassure them (Table 1, Q3).
Table 1

Illustrative quotes

QuotesPatients’ characteristics
Waking-up in the ICU alone, between nightmare and reality
Quote 1It was curious experience. It was actually insane. I didn’t know where the line was between my real life and what I was going through. I felt like it wasn’t me and that I was looking at the scene from the outside. Finally I told myself that dying wouldn't be so terrible after all

Male patient, aged 73, 10 weeks in ICU, including 9 under sedation for MVa

ICU 1

Quote 2I had a lot of dreams that for me were real but weren’t actually real—but I didn’t know that. I was suffocating, calling for help and no one would come, and I would die every time

Male patient, aged 65, 6 weeks in ICU, including 5 under sedation for MV

ICU 1

Quote 3When I woke up I discovered that I wasn’t at home so it just wasn’t right, I was far from everything, far from my loved ones, I didn’t recognize anything or anybody and I thought to myself “what am I doing here?”

Female patient, aged 68, 3 weeks in ICU, including 2 under sedation for MV

ICU 3

Quote 4The hardest thing for me was when I woke up, I couldn’t talk and I couldn’t walk. I was in shock

Male patient, aged 74, 3 ½ weeks in ICU, including 2 under sedation for MV

ICU 1

Meaning-making and the possibility of family implication
Quote 5It was a mixture of nightmare and reality. I thought I had been kidnapped and I wanted to escape. I was afraid; I didn't understand anything (…). It was horrible, a nightmare, until I saw my wife, she was the one who allowed me to reconnect with reality. It was one visit but it was exceptional. It was she who helped me understand (…) because everything was blurred. After her visit, I began to recognize the caregivers around me and to understand where I was

Male patient, aged 50, 4 weeks in ICU, including 3 under sedation for MV

ICU 2

Quote 6I was completely out of sync; I didn’t know what time it was, what day it was, if it was day or night, so in fact when I saw her (wife) it was joy, I realized that all was not lost. It was hard not to see my children right away, but at least I saw my wife. If I hadn’t seen her it would have been much harder

Male patient, aged 41, 2 weeks in ICU, including 10 days under sedation for MV

ICU 4

Quote 7I would have liked to have at least one visit from my wife, even behind the windows… I would have been more courageous. It would have given me more hope, it would have made me want to make more effort, to fight even more…

Male patient, aged 70, 7 ½ weeks in ICU, including 6 under sedation for MV

ICU 6

Quote 8Once you see your family, you see the future

Male patient, aged 58, 4 weeks in ICU, including 2 under sedation for MV

ICU 2

Quote 9The most important moment for me was the shower I took in the ICU at my wife’s request—the fact that she was the one who asked for it was… everything about my wife is just divine, it’s paradise. During the shower, I told myself that life is beautiful, I felt alive for the first time since I woke up

Male patient, aged 70, 2 weeks in ICU, 10 days under sedation for MV

ICU 3

Family absence as a stress
Quote 10I felt that it was serious because you couldn’t see anyone, my family wasn’t there and that was very stressful. I felt very isolated. I saw my wife once behind a glass window… I think that all those protective barriers caused me a lot of stress

Male patient, aged 73, 5 weeks in ICU, including approximately 4 weeks under sedation for MV

ICU 3

Quote 11As I couldn’t see my wife, I was worried that something had happened to her and they didn’t want to tell me

Male patient, aged 69, 2 weeks in ICU, 11 days under sedation for MV

ICU 5

aMV mechanical ventilation

Illustrative quotes Male patient, aged 73, 10 weeks in ICU, including 9 under sedation for MV ICU 1 Male patient, aged 65, 6 weeks in ICU, including 5 under sedation for MV ICU 1 Female patient, aged 68, 3 weeks in ICU, including 2 under sedation for MV ICU 3 Male patient, aged 74, 3 ½ weeks in ICU, including 2 under sedation for MV ICU 1 Male patient, aged 50, 4 weeks in ICU, including 3 under sedation for MV ICU 2 Male patient, aged 41, 2 weeks in ICU, including 10 days under sedation for MV ICU 4 Male patient, aged 70, 7 ½ weeks in ICU, including 6 under sedation for MV ICU 6 Male patient, aged 58, 4 weeks in ICU, including 2 under sedation for MV ICU 2 Male patient, aged 70, 2 weeks in ICU, 10 days under sedation for MV ICU 3 Male patient, aged 73, 5 weeks in ICU, including approximately 4 weeks under sedation for MV ICU 3 Male patient, aged 69, 2 weeks in ICU, 11 days under sedation for MV ICU 5 aMV mechanical ventilation Once fully awake, patients discovered that they needed to re-learn how to walk, how to talk and how to eat (Table 1, Q4). Patients felt scared, lost, alone, and had no safe landmarks. The one event that brought them back to a reality with a real meaning was the presence of their loved-one (Table 1, Q5 and 6). Patients with no visits felt that if they had benefited from the visit of a family member it would also have given them courage and energy to fight harder to leave the ICU as soon as possible, possibly reducing their length of stay (Table 1, Q7 and Q8). Any contact or event related to their family increased their wellbeing (Table 1, Q9). The emotional distress of waking up after such an experience was overwhelming and patients needed the help of their loved-ones to get through it. Family members are not simple visitors: they play active roles in the ICU and can help the patients by not only reassuring, comforting and guiding them but also by helping them integrate the ICU experience as part of their broader life story: meaning making is an essential part of getting better. Moreover, the absence or distance of their loved-ones increased their stress (Table 1, Q10) and their concern that something terrible may have happened to them (Table 1, Q11). Banning families from the ICU is deleterious at all times and specifically during the pandemic during which patients can spend weeks in a coma, thus increasing the risk of delirium and vulnerability. While adapting visiting policies was undoubtedly necessary given the nature of the threat, our pilot study shows that patients suffered considerably from the absence of their loved-ones. Those who did benefit from a visit were able to feel safer and to give meaning to their hospitalization more rapidly. To avoid traumatic experiences [5], specific patient- and family-centered guidelines for crisis management are urgently needed that include the possibility of regular family visits. Below is the link to the electronic supplementary material. Supplementary file1 (DOCX 19 KB)
  3 in total

1.  Compassionate Communication and End-of-Life Care for Critically Ill Patients with SARS-CoV-2 Infection.

Authors:  Ángel Estella
Journal:  J Clin Ethics       Date:  2020

2.  The Lived Experience of ICU Clinicians During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Outbreak: A Qualitative Study.

Authors:  Nancy Kentish-Barnes; Lucas Morin; Zoé Cohen-Solal; Alain Cariou; Alexandre Demoule; Elie Azoulay
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2021-06-01       Impact factor: 7.598

3.  Prevalence and risk factors for delirium in critically ill patients with COVID-19 (COVID-D): a multicentre cohort study.

Authors:  Brenda T Pun; Rafael Badenes; Gabriel Heras La Calle; Onur M Orun; Wencong Chen; Rameela Raman; Beata-Gabriela K Simpson; Stephanie Wilson-Linville; Borja Hinojal Olmedillo; Ana Vallejo de la Cueva; Mathieu van der Jagt; Rosalía Navarro Casado; Pilar Leal Sanz; Günseli Orhun; Carolina Ferrer Gómez; Karla Núñez Vázquez; Patricia Piñeiro Otero; Fabio Silvio Taccone; Elena Gallego Curto; Anselmo Caricato; Hilde Woien; Guillaume Lacave; Hollis R O'Neal; Sarah J Peterson; Nathan E Brummel; Timothy D Girard; E Wesley Ely; Pratik P Pandharipande
Journal:  Lancet Respir Med       Date:  2021-01-08       Impact factor: 30.700

  3 in total
  7 in total

1.  Family experiences and perceptions of intensive care unit care and communication during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  R Digby; E Manias; K J Haines; J Orosz; J Ihle; T K Bucknall
Journal:  Aust Crit Care       Date:  2022-04-01       Impact factor: 3.265

2.  Practice of family-centred care in intensive care units before the COVID-19-pandemic: A cross-sectional analysis in German-speaking countries.

Authors:  Maria Brauchle; Peter Nydahl; Gudrun Pregartner; Magdalena Hoffmann; Marie-Madlen Jeitziner
Journal:  Intensive Crit Care Nurs       Date:  2021-09-07       Impact factor: 3.072

3.  Voices from the Pandemic: A Qualitative Study of Family Experiences and Suggestions regarding the Care of Critically Ill Patients.

Authors:  Sarah J Hochendoner; Timothy H Amass; J Randall Curtis; Pamela Witt; Xingran Weng; Olubukola Toyobo; Daniella Lipnick; Priscilla Armstrong; Margaret Hope Cruse; Olivia Rea; Lauren J Van Scoy
Journal:  Ann Am Thorac Soc       Date:  2022-04

4.  Leveraging Family Experience to Improve Their Engagement in the Intensive Care Unit.

Authors:  Chad H Hochberg; David N Hager; Michelle N Eakin
Journal:  Ann Am Thorac Soc       Date:  2022-04

5.  Variation in communication and family visiting policies in intensive care within and between countries during the Covid-19 pandemic: The COVISIT international survey.

Authors:  Alexis Tabah; Muhammed Elhadi; Emma Ballard; Andrea Cortegiani; Maurizio Cecconi; Takeshi Unoki; Laurą Galarza; Regis Goulart Rosa; Francois Barbier; Elie Azoulay; Kevin B Laupland; Nathalie Ssi Yan Kai; Marlies Ostermann; Guy Francois; Jan J De Waele; Kirsten Fiest; Peter Spronk; Julie Benbenishty; Mariangela Pellegrini; Louise Rose
Journal:  J Crit Care       Date:  2022-05-04       Impact factor: 4.298

6.  Communication and visiting policies in Italian intensive care units during the first COVID-19 pandemic wave and lockdown: a nationwide survey.

Authors:  Thomas Langer; Francesca Carmela Depalo; Clarissa Forlini; Silvia Landini; Andrea Mezzetti; Paola Previtali; Gianpaola Monti; Carolina de Toma; Davide Biscardi; Alberto Giannini; Roberto Fumagalli; Giovanni Mistraletti
Journal:  BMC Anesthesiol       Date:  2022-06-17       Impact factor: 2.376

7.  Why and how to open intensive care units to family visits during the pandemic.

Authors:  Giovanni Mistraletti; Alberto Giannini; Giuseppe Gristina; Paolo Malacarne; Davide Mazzon; Elisabetta Cerutti; Alessandro Galazzi; Ilaria Giubbilo; Marco Vergano; Vladimiro Zagrebelsky; Luigi Riccioni; Giacomo Grasselli; Silvia Scelsi; Maurizio Cecconi; Flavia Petrini
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2021-06-02       Impact factor: 9.097

  7 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.