Family's preferences for and experiences of writing practices in adult intensive care and its use in early bereavement: A descriptive qualitative study.

Aust Crit Care

Susan Wakil School of Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, Australia; Broken Hill Department of Rural Health, University of Sydney, Australia.

Published: July 2024

Background: Family partaking in writing practices, such as writing intensive care unit (ICU) patient diaries, personal diaries/journaling, social media, or instant messaging services, during ICU admission may allow the family to unintentionally participate in a form of expressive writing. These writing practices could provide structure for the family authors to explore emotions and manage significant life events, including death of a loved one. Limited studies have explored the family's postmortem experiences and perceived value of writing practices maintained during an ICU admission.

Objectives: The objective of this study was to explore the family member's preferences for and experiences of writing practices in the adult ICU and its use in early bereavement.

Methods: descriptive qualitative design using inductive reflexive thematic analysis from a purposeful, convenience sample of 16 bereaved participants from a tertiary referral, adult ICU in Australia who discussed their experiences of and preferences in writing practices. Reporting adheres to the consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research checklist.

Findings: Six participants maintained writing practices during the ICU admission and 10 did not. Three themes were generated from the data: the decision to maintain writing practices was shaped by past behaviours and perceived utility; moments captured were influenced by the loved ones' clinical status and their ability to access the writing medium; and writing practices have limited utility as a memory making object in early bereavement.

Conclusions: Based on the generated findings, participants who did not maintain writing practices did not later regret this decision during early bereavement. Participants who did maintain writing practices predominately used a personal diary/journal that they carried with them. As the loved one approached death, the written entries became shorter, then ceased. Most of the written entries were not read during early bereavement, suggesting the writing practices' psychological value might have been predominately gained at the time of writing, rather than during early bereavement.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aucc.2024.01.002DOI Listing

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