Experience of care through patients, family members and health professionals in an intensive care unit: a qualitative descriptive study
Sammanfattning
Background: A patient's stay in an intensive care unit (ICU) can lead to psychological and social alterations in patients and their nearest family circle. Healthcare staff and patients’ family members strongly influence patients’ stays in ICU.
Aims: To explore the perceptions about the experiences of patients in the ICU, their family members and nurses who attend them.
Methods: A descriptive phenomenological design was used to guide the research. A purposive sample of 27 male and female participated. Nine hospitalised patients, nine nurses and nine family members were interviewed in 2016 using a semi‐structured, face to face interview. Steps of Giorgi phenomenological method were used to analyse the qualitative data.
Findings: Among the three categorised groups, there is a common point that is the constant of humanization in care and it is very clear on the part of the patient, the patient's family and the nurses whom they attend. In addition, both in the group of patients and in the group of families allude to the fear and anguish that responds to patients, this problem does not appear in the speeches of nurses, who are torn between excessive technology and the performance of their work correctly for better patient welfare.
Conclusions: A stay in an ICU implies emotional expense for both patients and their families, which leads to a series of changes in their affective and social sphere, manifested by a set of requirements that must be responded by the multidisciplinary team that attends to patients. It would be fundamental to inform the health authorities about these requirements in order to modify the usual conduct habits displayed in ICU, which would help improve all levels for patients, their families and nurses. • Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons.