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Exploring perspectives of supporting the process of dying, death and bereavement among critical care staff: A multidisciplinary, qualitative approach. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how critical care staff view dying, death, and bereavement, emphasizing their roles with patients and families in intensive care settings.
  • The research involved 15 critical care professionals through semi-structured interviews, highlighting challenges faced and emphasizing the need for improved support systems.
  • Findings indicated that enhancing psychological and educational resources, along with standardizing bereavement support across units, could significantly benefit both staff and families during the dying process.

Article Abstract

Background: Dying and death in critical care settings can have particularly negative implications for the bereavement experience of family members, family interaction and the wellbeing of critical care staff. This study explored critical care staff perspectives of dying, death and bereavement in this context, and their role related to patients and their families, adopting a multidisciplinary perspective.

Method: This study employed a descriptive exploratory qualitative design, using reflexive thematic analysis to interpret the data. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 15 critical care staff from hospitals in the Republic of Ireland. Most participants were female ( = 11), with four male participants. Professional disciplines included nursing, dietetics, physiotherapy, anaesthesiology and medicine.

Results: Key findings included supporting a 'nice death' for patients and their families, the challenges critical care staff experience, the need for better supports in critical care, and the need for change in current bereavement support provision given the diversity evident in the modern Irish population.

Conclusion: This study suggests that the unique challenges faced by staff and families throughout the dying process may benefit from the development of additional psychological, educational, and infrastructural supports. Inconsistencies in supports across critical care units in Ireland were also identified. Future research should complement the current study and examine family members' experience of the dying process in critical care and their perspectives on supports provided.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11699554PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17511437241308672DOI Listing

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