Patient care demands, the professional practice environment and a lack of resources for families hindered nursing family caregiver involvement. Greater attention to these barriers as they relate to family caregiver involvement and clinical outcomes should be a priority in future research.
Critical care nurses are vital to promoting family engagement in the intensive care unit. However, nurses have varying perceptions about how much family members should be involved. The Questionnaire on Factors That Influence Family Engagement was given to a national sample of 433 critical care nurses. This correlational study explored the impact of nurse and organizational characteristics on barriers and facilitators to family engagement. Study results indicate that (1) nurses were most likely to invite family caregivers to provide simple daily care; (2) age, degree earned, critical care experience, hospital location, unit type, and staffing ratios influenced the scores; and (3) nursing workflow partially mediated the relationships between the intensive care unit environment and nurses' attitudes and between patient acuity and nurses' attitudes. These results help inform nursing leaders on ways to promote nurse support of active family engagement in the intensive care unit.Keywords critical care; family caregivers; family-centered nursing; family engagement An increasing number of Americans require treatment in the intensive care unit (ICU), and a proportional increase in family caregivers will assume caregiving responsibilities that can have persistent negative effects on their health and overall quality of life. [1][2][3][4][5][6] The conventional ICU care paradigm has primarily targeted the informational needs of family Breanna Hetland is Postdoctoral Fellow, Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH (bdh66@case.edu). HHS Public AccessAuthor manuscript AACN Adv Crit Care. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2017 September 07. Author Manuscript Author ManuscriptAuthor Manuscript Author Manuscript caregivers of the critically ill, but has not addressed how to actively engage caregivers in other aspects of the ICU experience such as symptom assessment and the direct provision of care. [7][8][9][10] Although critical care research, policy, and practice guidelines 9,10 increasingly recognize family caregivers as part of a larger patient-provider interaction during critical illness, the literature on family caregiver engagement in this context mainly focuses on passive forms of involvement such as family presence, communication, and decisionmaking. Few studies address family caregivers' active contributions to patient care. 7,8,[11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18] Patient and family engagement are defined as active partnerships among health care providers, patients, and families. 7 Identifying effective ways to implement patient and family engagement is paramount to improving the patient and family experience as well as improving safety, quality, and delivery of care. [7][8][9] In the ICU, critical care nurses are the frontline providers of life-sustaining care and key staff members in promoting patient and family engagement. However, the literature provides evidence that critical care nurses express resistance to involving family caregivers because of misconception...
Background Mechanical ventilation (MV) causes many distressing symptoms. Weaning, the gradual decrease in ventilator assistance leading to termination of MV, increases respiratory effort, which may exacerbate symptoms and prolong MV. Music, a non-pharmacological intervention without side effects may benefit patients during weaning from mechanical ventilatory support. Methods A narrative review of OVID Medline, PsychINFO, and CINAHL databases was conducted to examine the evidence for the use of music intervention in MV and MV weaning. Results Music intervention had a positive impact on ventilated patients; 16 quantitative and 2 qualitative studies were identified. Quantitative studies included randomized clinical trials (10), case controls (3), pilot studies (2) and a feasibility study. Conclusions Evidence supports music as an effective intervention that can lesson symptoms related to MV and promote effective weaning. It has potential to reduce costs and increase patient satisfaction. However, more studies are needed to establish its use during MV weaning.
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