Objectives: To investigate patients' experience of ICU diaries 6 months after ICU discharge among survivors. This study was designed to add insight into a large randomized study, which found no benefit of the ICU diary to post-traumatic stress disorder among critically ill patients having received mechanical ventilation.
Design: A preplanned qualitative substudy of patients receiving an ICU diary written by ICU caregivers and families. Six months after ICU discharge, survivors were contacted by a psychologist for a telephone interview using a semi-directive guide.
Setting: Thirty-five French ICUs.
Patients: All ICU survivors having received an ICU diary.
Intervention: An ICU diary written by both ICU staff and families.
Measurements And Main Results: Among the 332 patients randomized in the intervention group (having had an ICU diary filled by both ICU staff and families), 191 (57.7%) were alive at 6 months and 101 of 191 (52.9%) participated in a telephone interview. They were (median [interquartile range]) 64 years old (53-70 yr old); 65 (64.4%) were men, and 79 (78.2%) were medical patients. Duration of ICU stay was 13 days (8-21 d). Three themes were derived from the thematic analysis: 1) reading the diary: between emotion and pain, 2) how the diary helped, and 3) the bittersweet representation of the diary. For half of the patients, the diary is a good memory of difficult times (55/101, 54.5%), others seem to be more ambivalent about it (28/101, 27.8%), and 37 of 101, 36.6% see it as a painful representation of a time to be forgotten.
Conclusions: When reading their ICU diaries, ICU survivors experienced mixed emotions, related to family messages, medical caregiving, and to the severity of their illness. Patients described diaries as a help or a hindrance to recovery, depending on their wish to remember the period or move on from it.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/CCE.0000000000000384 | DOI Listing |
BMJ Open
January 2025
Centre for Neuroscience Studies, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Introduction: Survivors of critical illness and their caregivers are at risk for long-term cognitive, physical and psychiatric impairments known as post-intensive care syndrome (PICS) and PICS-family, respectively. This study will assess the feasibility of a randomised controlled trial (RCT) evaluating an intensive care unit (ICU) follow-up care bundle versus standard-of-care for ICU patients and their caregivers.
Methods And Analysis: This is a single-centre feasibility study.
Intensive Crit Care Nurs
December 2024
Department of Intensive Care, Erasmus MC, University Medical Centre Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Objectives: To identify the key determinants for implementing and utilizing a digital intensive care unit (ICU) diary among ICU professionals.
Background: Despite the advantages of digital diaries over traditional paper ones, their implementation presents challenges that necessitate tailored strategies considering the influencing factors.
Design: A multicentre, cross-sectional survey study.
Burns
November 2024
Alliance of Dutch Burn Centers, Burn Center Martini Hospital Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands; Hanze University of Applied Sciences Groningen, Research Group Healthy Ageing, Allied Healthcare and Nursing, Groningen, the Netherlands; University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Department of Human Movement Sciences, Groningen, the Netherlands. Electronic address:
Aim: Psychiatric problems are common in critically ill patients after discharge from an intensive care unit (ICU). The effect of intensive care unit (ICU) diaries on psychiatric symptoms after ICU discharge was investigated in this prospective study.
Methods: Enrolled were critically ill adult patients who were emergently admitted to an ICU and expected to stay for at least 2 days.
Background: An intensive care unit (ICU) diary provides a powerful and moving account of a patient's journey through critical care.
Aim: The primary goal of this research was to explore the qualitative perceptions of general ICU survivors toward the ICU diary, which was completed during their hospital stay and reintroduced to them during a follow-up visit 6 months after ICU discharge.
Setting: An Italian general ICU with structured follow-up and an ICU diary program.
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