Beard Helen
High Dependency Unit, West Suffolk Hospital NHS Trust, Hardwick Lane, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk.
Nurs Crit Care. 2005 Nov-Dec;10(6):272-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1362-1017.2005.00131.x.
Relocation stress is a phenomenon in which physical and psychological disturbances are experienced following transfer from one environment to another [Carpenito LJ. (2000). Nursing Diagnosis. Application to Clinical Practice, 8th edn]. The purpose of this review was to identify whether a period of intermediate care minimizes the problems associated with relocation stress after discharge from the intensive care unit (ICU) and before transfer to the ward. Methods of retrieving the literature involved identifying key terms, utilizing a range of databases and applying specific criteria in order to delineate the boundaries of the search. Using electronic and manual search methods, 11 studies were selected, both primary and secondary research. Following tabulation and critiquing of the studies, the findings of the review suggest that the factors which contribute towards relocation stress are the loss of one-to-one nursing, a reduction of visible monitoring equipment, lack of continuity of care and inadequate preparation of the patient for the transfer. The evidence also indicates that in order to minimize these factors, early planning and preparation of the patient for transfer are required, incorporating strategies of gradual reduction in nursing attention and monitoring equipment and the provision of information. Although the benefits of intermediate care are established as being advanced monitoring, appropriate nurse-to-patient ratio, heightened demonstration of expert knowledge and skill, there is no sufficient evidence to indicate a period of intermediate care that can ease the transition from the ICU to the ward.