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Vigilant attentiveness in families observing deterioration in the dying intensive care patient: a secondary analysis study

Vigilant attentiveness in families observing deterioration in the dying intensive care patient: a secondary analysis study
Vigilant attentiveness in families observing deterioration in the dying intensive care patient: a secondary analysis study
Background

Family support in intensive care is often focussed on what information is communicated to families. This is particularly important during treatment withdrawal and end of life care. However, this positions families as passive receivers of information. Less is known about what bereaved family members actually observe at end of life and how this is interpreted.

Aim

Secondary analysis study was conducted in order to explore the concept of vigilant attentiveness in family members of adult patients dying in intensive care.

Method

Secondary analysis of eight interviews sorted from two primary data sets containing 19 interviews with 25 bereaved family members from two intensive care units in England was undertaken. Directed content analysis techniques were adopted.

Findings

Families are observant for physiological deterioration by watching for changes in cardiac monitors as well as paying attention to how their relative looks and sounds. Changes in treatment/interventions were also perceived to indicate deterioration.

Conclusion

Families are vigilant and attentive to deterioration, implying that families are active participants in information gathering. By clarifying what families notice, or do not notice during the dying trajectory in ICU, health care professionals can tailor information, helping to prepare families for the death of their relative.
death and dying, end of life care, families, intensive care
0964-3397
65-71
Coombs, Maureen
e7424ed2-6beb-481d-8489-83f3595fd04c
Tang, Juliana
b25d64b4-2f3d-428c-89c8-52e8b1d36d5a
Long-Sutehall, Tracy
92a6d1ba-9ec9-43f2-891e-5bfdb5026532
Coombs, Maureen
e7424ed2-6beb-481d-8489-83f3595fd04c
Tang, Juliana
b25d64b4-2f3d-428c-89c8-52e8b1d36d5a
Long-Sutehall, Tracy
92a6d1ba-9ec9-43f2-891e-5bfdb5026532

Coombs, Maureen, Tang, Juliana and Long-Sutehall, Tracy (2016) Vigilant attentiveness in families observing deterioration in the dying intensive care patient: a secondary analysis study. Intensive and Critical Care Nursing, 33, 65-71. (doi:10.1016/j.iccn.2015.12.002). (PMID:26875444)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background

Family support in intensive care is often focussed on what information is communicated to families. This is particularly important during treatment withdrawal and end of life care. However, this positions families as passive receivers of information. Less is known about what bereaved family members actually observe at end of life and how this is interpreted.

Aim

Secondary analysis study was conducted in order to explore the concept of vigilant attentiveness in family members of adult patients dying in intensive care.

Method

Secondary analysis of eight interviews sorted from two primary data sets containing 19 interviews with 25 bereaved family members from two intensive care units in England was undertaken. Directed content analysis techniques were adopted.

Findings

Families are observant for physiological deterioration by watching for changes in cardiac monitors as well as paying attention to how their relative looks and sounds. Changes in treatment/interventions were also perceived to indicate deterioration.

Conclusion

Families are vigilant and attentive to deterioration, implying that families are active participants in information gathering. By clarifying what families notice, or do not notice during the dying trajectory in ICU, health care professionals can tailor information, helping to prepare families for the death of their relative.

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Coombs et al_Vigilant attentiveness_Final.pdf - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 25 November 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 February 2016
Published date: April 2016
Keywords: death and dying, end of life care, families, intensive care
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 385308
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/385308
ISSN: 0964-3397
PURE UUID: 4111944a-285d-4189-8e20-509784c6d138
ORCID for Tracy Long-Sutehall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6661-9215

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 19 Jan 2016 08:56
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:12

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Contributors

Author: Maureen Coombs
Author: Juliana Tang

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