Schutz Rachael E C, Coats Heather L, Engelberg Ruth A, Curtis J Randall, Creutzfeldt Claire J
1 Vanderbilt School of Medicine , Nashville, Tennessee.
2 Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence, University of Washington , Seattle, Washington.
J Palliat Med. 2017 Feb;20(2):170-176. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2016.0286. Epub 2016 Oct 20.
Patients with severe acute brain injury (SABI) raise important palliative care considerations associated with sudden devastating injury and uncertain prognosis.
The goal of this study was to explore how family members, nurses, and physicians experience the palliative and supportive care needs of patients with SABI receiving care in the neuroscience intensive care unit (neuro-ICU).
Semistructured interviews were audiotaped, transcribed, and analyzed using thematic analysis.
SETTING/SUBJECTS: Thirty-bed neuro-ICU in a regional comprehensive stroke and level-one trauma center in the United States. We completed 47 interviews regarding 15 patients with family members (n = 16), nurses (n = 15), and physicians (n = 16).
Two themes were identified: (1) hope and (2) personhood. (1) Families linked prognostic uncertainty to a need for hope and expressed a desire for physicians to acknowledge this relationship. The language of hope varied depending on the participant: clinicians used hope as an object that can be given or taken away, generally in the process of conveying prognosis, while families expressed hope as an action that supported coping with their loved one's acute illness and its prognostic uncertainty. (2) Participants described the loss of personhood through brain injury, the need to recognize and treat the brain-injured patient as a person, and the importance of relatedness and connection, including personal support of families by clinicians.
Support for hope and preservation of personhood challenge care in the neuro-ICU as identified by families and clinicians of patients with SABI. Specific practical approaches can address these challenges and improve the palliative care provided to patients and families in the neuro-ICU.
重度急性脑损伤(SABI)患者引发了与突然的灾难性损伤和不确定预后相关的重要姑息治疗考量。
本研究的目的是探讨家庭成员、护士和医生如何看待在神经科学重症监护病房(神经重症监护病房)接受治疗的SABI患者的姑息和支持性护理需求。
采用主题分析法对半结构化访谈进行录音、转录和分析。
地点/研究对象:美国一家地区综合性中风和一级创伤中心的拥有30张床位的神经重症监护病房。我们就15例患者完成了47次访谈,访谈对象包括家庭成员(n = 16)、护士(n = 15)和医生(n = 16)。
确定了两个主题:(1)希望和(2)人格。(1)家属将预后的不确定性与对希望的需求联系起来,并表示希望医生承认这种关系。希望的表述因参与者而异:临床医生将希望视为一种可以给予或剥夺的东西,通常是在传达预后的过程中,而家属则将希望表述为一种支持应对其亲人急性疾病及其预后不确定性的行为。(2)参与者描述了因脑损伤导致的人格丧失、将脑损伤患者视为人进行识别和治疗的必要性,以及关联性和联系的重要性,包括临床医生对家属的个人支持。
正如SABI患者的家属和临床医生所指出的,对希望的支持和人格的维护对神经重症监护病房的护理构成了挑战。具体的实用方法可以应对这些挑战,并改善为神经重症监护病房的患者及其家属提供的姑息治疗。