TY - JOUR
T1 - Aloud real- time reading of intensive care unit diaries
T2 - A feasibility study
AU - Johnson, Kimberly R.
AU - Temeyer, Joseph P.
AU - Schulte, Phillip J.
AU - Nydahl, Peter
AU - Philbrick, Kemuel L.
AU - Karnatovskaia, Lioudmila V.
N1 - Funding Information:
The study was support by the grants from: ZOLL Foundation (grant # FP00113574 ) and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute K23HL146741-1 .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023
PY - 2023/6
Y1 - 2023/6
N2 - Objectives: Memories of frightening/delusional intensive care unit experiences are a major risk factor for subsequent psychiatric morbidity of critical illness survivors; factual memories are protective. Systematically providing factual information during initial memory consolidation could mitigate the emotional character of the formed memories. We explored feasibility and obtained stakeholder feedback of a novel approach to intensive care unit diaries whereby entries were read aloud to the patients right after they were written to facilitate systematic real time orientation and formation of factual memories. Research methodology: Prospective interventional pilot study involving reading diary entries aloud. We have also interviewed involved stakeholders for feedback and collected exploratory data on psychiatric symptoms from patients right after the intensive care stay. Setting: Various intensive care units in a single academic center. Main outcome measures: Feasibility was defined as intervention delivery on ≥80% of days following patient recruitment. Content analysis was performed on stakeholder interview responses. Questionnaire data were compared for patients who received real-time reading to the historical cohort who did not. Results: Overall, 57% (17 of 30) of patients achieved the set feasibility threshold. Following protocol adjustment, we achieved 86% feasibility in the last subset of patients. Patients reported the intervention as comforting and appreciated the reorientation aspect. Nurses overwhelmingly liked the idea; most common concern was not knowing what to write. Some therapists were unsure whether reading entries aloud might overwhelm the patients. There were no significant differences in psychiatric symptoms when compared to the historic cohort. Conclusion: We encountered several implementation obstacles; once these were addressed, we achieved set feasibility target for the last group of patients. Reading diary entries aloud was welcomed by stakeholders. Designing a trial to assess efficacy of the intervention on psychiatric outcomes appears warranted. Implications for Clinical Practice: There is no recommendation to change current practice as benefits of the intervention are unproven.
AB - Objectives: Memories of frightening/delusional intensive care unit experiences are a major risk factor for subsequent psychiatric morbidity of critical illness survivors; factual memories are protective. Systematically providing factual information during initial memory consolidation could mitigate the emotional character of the formed memories. We explored feasibility and obtained stakeholder feedback of a novel approach to intensive care unit diaries whereby entries were read aloud to the patients right after they were written to facilitate systematic real time orientation and formation of factual memories. Research methodology: Prospective interventional pilot study involving reading diary entries aloud. We have also interviewed involved stakeholders for feedback and collected exploratory data on psychiatric symptoms from patients right after the intensive care stay. Setting: Various intensive care units in a single academic center. Main outcome measures: Feasibility was defined as intervention delivery on ≥80% of days following patient recruitment. Content analysis was performed on stakeholder interview responses. Questionnaire data were compared for patients who received real-time reading to the historical cohort who did not. Results: Overall, 57% (17 of 30) of patients achieved the set feasibility threshold. Following protocol adjustment, we achieved 86% feasibility in the last subset of patients. Patients reported the intervention as comforting and appreciated the reorientation aspect. Nurses overwhelmingly liked the idea; most common concern was not knowing what to write. Some therapists were unsure whether reading entries aloud might overwhelm the patients. There were no significant differences in psychiatric symptoms when compared to the historic cohort. Conclusion: We encountered several implementation obstacles; once these were addressed, we achieved set feasibility target for the last group of patients. Reading diary entries aloud was welcomed by stakeholders. Designing a trial to assess efficacy of the intervention on psychiatric outcomes appears warranted. Implications for Clinical Practice: There is no recommendation to change current practice as benefits of the intervention are unproven.
KW - ICU diaries
KW - Outcomes of critical illness
KW - Post intensive care syndrome
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U2 - 10.1016/j.iccn.2023.103400
DO - 10.1016/j.iccn.2023.103400
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85147431633
SN - 0964-3397
VL - 76
JO - Intensive and Critical Care Nursing
JF - Intensive and Critical Care Nursing
M1 - 103400
ER -