Family caregivers’ experience of patients with delirium in critical care units: A state-of-the-science integrative review

Abstract

Background: Delirium as a sudden cognitive and behavioral change can be traumatic for family caregivers. An understanding of family caregivers’ experiences with delirium in their loved one in an intensive care unit (ICU) will help clinicians provide family-centered care. Objective: To explore the impact of delirium on, and the needs of, family caregivers of ICU patients with delirium. Methods: A comprehensive search was done of literature in the PubMed, CINAHL, and Scopus databases published from 2000 to 2020. Primary studies written in English and done in critical care settings were included. Studies that did not focus on the family experience of delirium were excluded. Additional studies were identified by reviewing the reference lists of selected articles. Evidence was synthesized, and common themes were identified. Results: Among 210 studies, 7 were included after irrelevant and duplicate studies had been removed. Findings were categorized as (1) psychological impacts of a patient’s delirium on family caregivers and (2) family caregivers’ needs. Common psychological impacts included anxiety, depression, concern, fear, anger, uncertainty, shock, insecurity, and disappointment. Family caregivers reported needing informational and emotional support from, and effective communication with, health care professionals. Conclusions: Family caregivers’ health is crucial to ensuring the effectiveness of family engagement in delirium management. Future studies should consider family caregiver characteristics that could be used to predict psychological symptoms when caregivers are exposed to a patient’s delirium and explore whether specific types of delirium cause more psychological impacts and needs among family caregivers than other types of delirium cause.

Publication Title

American Journal of Critical Care

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