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Feasibility of a standardized family participation programme in the intensive care unit: A pilot survey study.
To assess the feasibility and applicability of a standardized programme to facilitate family participation in essential care activities in the intensive care unit.
Pilot study with a cross-sectional survey design.
A standardized programme to facilitate family participation in essential nursing care activities was implemented in intensive care units of three hospitals in the Netherlands from November 2018 until March 2019. The feasibility and applicability of the programme were assessed with surveys of the patients, relatives and healthcare providers.
Three intensive care units successfully implemented the standardized programme. Three patients, ten relatives and 37 healthcare providers responded to the surveys. Patients appreciated family participation and recognized that their relatives liked to participate. Relatives appreciated being able to do something for the patient (80%) and to participate in essential care activities (60%). The majority of relatives (60%) felt they had sufficient knowledge and skills to participate and did not feel obliged nor uncomfortable. Healthcare providers felt they were trained adequately and motivated to apply family participation; application was perceived as easy, clear and relatively effortless according to the majority. According to 68% of the healthcare providers, most relatives were perceived to be capable of learning to participate in essential care activities. Some healthcare providers felt uncertain about the patient's wishes regarding family participation, with some indicating the behaviours of relatives and patients discouraged them from offering family participation. Use of a standardized programme to facilitate family participation in essential care activities in the intensive care unit seems feasible and applicable as determined by relatives and healthcare providers.
Dijkstra B
,Uit Het Broek L
,van der Hoeven J
,Schoonhoven L
,Bosch F
,Van der Steen M
,Rood P
,Vloet L
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《Nursing Open》
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Exploring patients' and relatives' needs and perceptions regarding family participation in essential care in the intensive care unit: A qualitative study.
To examine the needs, perceptions and influencing factors according to former adult intensive care unit patients and relatives with regard to family participation in essential care in the unit.
A qualitative interpretive descriptive study using inductive thematic analysis.
Twelve pairs of former Dutch patients and their relatives were interviewed within two months after the patient's discharge from the unit between December 2017 and April 2018.
Four themes emerged: the family's history, the patient's condition, supporting the patient and supporting the relative. The family's history, in particular the relationship with the patient and former experience with care, determined the level of participation in essential care. The level of participation was also influenced by the patient's condition, more specifically level of consciousness, stability of the patient's situation and length of the patient's stay. The third theme, supporting the patient, related to presence/being able to 'be there' for the patient and a mostly positive attitude towards family participation. The last theme was supporting the relative, with three subthemes associated with relatives' needs and perceptions: (dis)comfort with participation in essential care, need for invitation and support, and concern about the possible strain experienced by relatives.
Supporting the patient and supporting the relative are reflecting the needs and perceptions of patients and relatives regarding family participation in essential care. Both the family's history and the patient's condition influence the relative's level of participation. Intensive care unit nurses and other healthcare providers could take these themes into account when encouraging family participation in essential care.
Patients' and relatives' needs and perceptions of family participation in essential care in the intensive care unit vary. Family participation in essential care is influenced by the family's history and the patient's condition. Healthcare providers could take these findings into account when implementing family participation in essential care.
Dijkstra BM
,Felten-Barentsz KM
,van der Valk MJM
,van der Hoeven JG
,Schoonhoven L
,Vloet LCM
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Family participation in essential care activities: Needs, perceptions, preferences, and capacities of intensive care unit patients, relatives, and healthcare providers-An integrative review.
Family participation in essential care activities may benefit both patients and relatives.
In this integrative review, we aimed to identify needs, perceptions, preferences, and capacities regarding family participation in essential care in intensive care units (ICUs) from the patient's, relatives', and ICU healthcare providers' perspective.
An integrative review method was used.
PubMed, CINAHL, EMBASE, MEDLINE, Cochrane, Web of Science, and reference lists of included articles were searched, from inception to January 25, 2021.
We included studies on family participation in essential care activities during ICU stay which reported associated needs, perceptions, preferences and capacities. Quality assessment was performed with the Kmet Standard Quality Assessment Criteria developed for evaluating primary research papers in a variety of fields, and an extensive qualitative thematic analysis was performed on the results.
Twenty-seven studies were included. Quality scores varied from 0.45 to 0.95 (range: 0-1). Patients' needs, perceptions, preferences, and capacities are largely unknown. Identified themes on needs and perceptions were relatives' desire to help the patient, a mostly positive attitude among all involved, stress regarding patient safety, perceived beneficial effects, relatives feeling in control-ICU healthcare providers' concerns about loss of control. Preferences for potential essential care activities vary. Relatives want an invitation and support from ICU healthcare providers. Themes regarding capacities were knowledge, skills, education and training, and organisational conditions.
Implementation of family participation in essential care requires education and training of relatives and ICU healthcare providers to address safety and quality of care concerns, though most studies lack further specification.
Dijkstra BM
,Felten-Barentsz KM
,van der Valk MJM
,Pelgrim T
,van der Hoeven HG
,Schoonhoven L
,Ebben RHA
,Vloet LCM
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《Australian Critical Care》
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Family participation in essential care activities in adult intensive care units: An integrative review of interventions and outcomes.
To systematically review interventions and outcomes regarding family participation in essential care in adult intensive care units.
Patients and relatives may benefit from family participation in essential care activities.
An integrative literature review.
The following databases were systematically searched from inception to January 25, 2021: PubMed, CINAHL, EMBASE, MEDLINE, Cochrane, Web of Science and reference lists of included articles. Studies were included when reporting on family participation in essential care activities in intensive care including interventions and outcomes. Quality of the studies was assessed with the Kmet Standard Quality Assessment Criteria. Interventions were assessed, using the TIDieR framework. Data were extracted and synthesised narratively.
A total of 6698 records were screened, and 322 full-text studies were assessed. Seven studies were included, describing an intervention to support family participation. Four studies had a pretest-posttest design, two were pilot feasibility studies and one was observational. The quality of the studies was poor to good, with Kmet-scores: 0.50-0.86 (possible score: 0-1, 1 being the highest). Five studies offered various essential care activities. One study provided sufficient intervention detail. Outcome measures among relatives varied from mental health symptoms to satisfaction, supportiveness, comfort level and experience. Two studies measured patient outcomes: delirium and pressure ulcers. Among ICU healthcare providers, perception, comfort level and experience were assessed. Since outcome measures varied, only narrative synthesis was possible. Family participation is associated with a reduction of anxiety and PTSD symptoms.
Intervention descriptions of family participation in essential care activities are generally inadequate and do not allow comparison and replication. Participation of relatives was associated with a significant reduction in mental health symptoms. Other outcome measures varied, therefore, the use of additional outcome measures with validated measurement instruments should be considered.
The review contributed further insight into interventions aiming at family participation in essential care activities in the intensive care unit and their outcomes.
Neither patients nor public were involved.
Dijkstra BM
,Felten-Barentsz KM
,van der Valk MJM
,Pelgrim T
,van der Hoeven JG
,Schoonhoven L
,Ebben RHA
,Vloet LCM
... -
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Health care providers' perceptions of family participation in essential care in the intensive care unit: A qualitative study.
Family participation in essential care may benefit patients and relatives.
To examine the needs, perceptions and preferences of health care providers about family participation in essential care in the adult intensive care unit.
A qualitative descriptive study using inductive thematic analysis. Three focus group interviews with a total of 30 intensive care unit health care providers, consisting of 20 critical care nurses, one nursing assistant, five physicians, three physical therapists and one speech therapist working in three Dutch intensive care units.
One overarching theme, balancing interests, and four main themes emerged: looking after the patient's interests, taking the relatives' perspective into account, looking after interests of intensive care unit health care providers and conditions for family participation. The first theme, looking after the patient's interests, included three sub-themes: insecurity about patient's wishes and needs, patient safety concerns and potential benefits for the patient. The second theme, taking the relatives' perspective into account, was also characterized by three sub-themes: concerns about the relatives' possible burden, potential benefits for the relative and the relationship between patient and relative. The third theme, looking after interests of intensive care unit health care providers, included three sub-themes: attitude towards family participation in essential care, differing perceptions of essential care and concerns about intensive care unit health care provider's burden. The last theme, conditions for family participation, included two sub-themes: establishing a relationship and considering family participation in essential care as a process.
Health care providers' perceptions and preferences regarding family participation in essential care in the intensive care unit are summarized in the overarching theme balancing interests. This overarching theme also reflects the needs and perceptions of patients and relatives.
These findings may support critical care nurses and other health care providers when encouraging family participation in essential care.
Dijkstra BM
,Schoonhoven L
,Felten-Barentsz KM
,van der Valk MJM
,van der Hoeven JG
,Vloet LCM
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