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The development of a family-led novel intervention for delirium prevention and management in the adult intensive care unit: a co-design qualitative study

The development of a family-led novel intervention for delirium prevention and management in the adult intensive care unit: a co-design qualitative study
The development of a family-led novel intervention for delirium prevention and management in the adult intensive care unit: a co-design qualitative study
Aim: the aim of this study was to codesign a Family Members’ Voice Reorientation Intervention (FAMVR) for delirium prevention and management in critically ill adult patients through collaborative process with previous patients, families, and clinical staff.

Background: delirium is a common consequence of intensive care admission, and there is limited evidence to support family-led interventions to prevent or minimise delirium in intensive care. People with lived experience of intensive care are seldom involved in codesigning delirium prevention and management interventions despite the identified benefits of their involvement in delirium care.

Design: codesign qualitative study.

Methods: the process of co-designing was undertaken using the four stages of the Double Diamond model. Participants included people with lived experience of the intensive care unit, family members, and intensive care clinicians. The codesign approach was utilised, and data were gathered from a series of focus groups and individual interviews. Data were digitally recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analysed using thematic analysis.

Findings: of the 26 people who indicated their interest in participating, 12 (46%) completed the first and second stages, and nine (35%) completed the third and fourth stages of the Family Members’ Voice Reorientation Intervention development. All participant groups were represented in the fourth stage: patients (n = 4), family members (n = 1), nurses (n = 2), and medical staff (n = 2). Four themes were identified: message content, wording, reactions, and tone, all of which informed the prototype of the intervention and its associated domains.

Conclusion: a codesign approach was important for developing a delirium management intervention. This process enabled participants to provide their feedback in the context of their unique experiences, which in turn enhanced the authenticity and appropriateness of this unique intervention.
Co-design, Critical care, Delirium, Digital program, Family intervention, Family-centered, Voice reorientation
1036-7314
Johnson, Gideon U.
8bd45ce5-a60e-411f-8933-93f969ea3c75
Towell-Barnard, Amanda
a1934b82-df48-4777-967b-05ef3175d6e7
Mclean, Chrisopher
04c1b951-0f57-4d2e-a910-ea814c785166
Ewens, Beverley
94bd8270-bc25-4093-a58e-419cf5c850b1
Johnson, Gideon U.
8bd45ce5-a60e-411f-8933-93f969ea3c75
Towell-Barnard, Amanda
a1934b82-df48-4777-967b-05ef3175d6e7
Mclean, Chrisopher
04c1b951-0f57-4d2e-a910-ea814c785166
Ewens, Beverley
94bd8270-bc25-4093-a58e-419cf5c850b1

Johnson, Gideon U., Towell-Barnard, Amanda, Mclean, Chrisopher and Ewens, Beverley (2024) The development of a family-led novel intervention for delirium prevention and management in the adult intensive care unit: a co-design qualitative study. Australian Critical Care. (doi:10.1016/j.aucc.2024.07.076).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aim: the aim of this study was to codesign a Family Members’ Voice Reorientation Intervention (FAMVR) for delirium prevention and management in critically ill adult patients through collaborative process with previous patients, families, and clinical staff.

Background: delirium is a common consequence of intensive care admission, and there is limited evidence to support family-led interventions to prevent or minimise delirium in intensive care. People with lived experience of intensive care are seldom involved in codesigning delirium prevention and management interventions despite the identified benefits of their involvement in delirium care.

Design: codesign qualitative study.

Methods: the process of co-designing was undertaken using the four stages of the Double Diamond model. Participants included people with lived experience of the intensive care unit, family members, and intensive care clinicians. The codesign approach was utilised, and data were gathered from a series of focus groups and individual interviews. Data were digitally recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analysed using thematic analysis.

Findings: of the 26 people who indicated their interest in participating, 12 (46%) completed the first and second stages, and nine (35%) completed the third and fourth stages of the Family Members’ Voice Reorientation Intervention development. All participant groups were represented in the fourth stage: patients (n = 4), family members (n = 1), nurses (n = 2), and medical staff (n = 2). Four themes were identified: message content, wording, reactions, and tone, all of which informed the prototype of the intervention and its associated domains.

Conclusion: a codesign approach was important for developing a delirium management intervention. This process enabled participants to provide their feedback in the context of their unique experiences, which in turn enhanced the authenticity and appropriateness of this unique intervention.

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Accepted/In Press date: 5 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 August 2024
Keywords: Co-design, Critical care, Delirium, Digital program, Family intervention, Family-centered, Voice reorientation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493377
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493377
ISSN: 1036-7314
PURE UUID: 493eabe1-d5e5-4f0e-9d62-e8fd54220b03
ORCID for Chrisopher Mclean: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9951-9894

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 02 Sep 2024 16:32
Last modified: 03 Sep 2024 01:39

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Contributors

Author: Gideon U. Johnson
Author: Amanda Towell-Barnard
Author: Beverley Ewens

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