Nursing Interventions for Patient Empowerment during Intensive Care Unit Discharge: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design, Protocol, and Registration
2.2. Criteria for Inclusion and Exclusion in the Review
2.3. Search Strategies and Data Resources
2.4. Review and Study Selection
2.5. Data Extraction and Data Synthesis
2.6. Methodological Quality Assessment
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection
3.2. Characteristics of the Included Studies
3.3. Participants
3.4. Risk-of-Bias Assessment
3.5. Main Findings
3.5.1. Primary Outcome
- Discharge planning. One study assessed discharge needs and defined early discharge planning [36].
- ICU recovery/therapeutic environment and complex interventions. Three studies included a change in routine by the nurse-led preventive psychological intervention for critically ill patients [39], with hospital rehabilitation, comprising enhanced physiotherapy, nutritional care and information provision, case-management by a ward-based clinical team [42], and an interdisciplinary recovery program with a nurse practitioner and case manager [41].
3.5.2. Secondary Outcomes
- Anxiety and depression: Knowles et al. (2009) [37] found that a diary with daily information about patient health reduced anxiety and depression in the experimental group. In the same line, Kuchi et al. (2020) demonstrated changes in patient attitudes toward risk-motivated behavior, and they improved physical health with information and education. Demircelik et al. (2015) found less anxiety and depression in patients receiving nursing education through multimedia intervention
- Post-traumatic stress disorder: Wade et al. (2019) [39] performed an RCT in 1458 adults post ICU and found no significant differences in PTSD symptom severity at six months among groups.
- Perceived risk score: Kuchi et al., (2020) [38] in 84 cardiovascular patients, found significant differences between the intervention and control group in the total score of perceived risk and its subscales.
- Patient satisfaction: Ramsay et al. (2016) [42] assessed the patient satisfaction with the PEQ and revealed significant differences between groups suggesting greater patient satisfaction in the EG.
- Hospital readmission: Bloom et al. (2019) [41] found that after discharge, at seven days, the readmission rate was 3.6% and 11.6%, in the intervention and control group, respectively. At 30 days, the readmission rate was 14.4% vs. 21.5% in the intervention and control groups, respectively.
4. Discussion
4.1. Applicability of the Findings to the Review Question
4.2. Strengths of the Review
4.3. Limitations of the Review
5. Conclusions
Practice Implications
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Database and Keywords Combinations | Articles |
---|---|
PUBMED | |
((empowerment patient OR patient education OR patient information) AND (ICU discharge OR ICU transfer OR ICU transition) AND (nursing interventions) AND (adults)) | 214 |
EMBASE | |
((empowerment AND patient OR patient) AND (education OR patient) AND information AND (”ICU discharge” OR (ICU AND (“discharge”/exp OR discharge)) OR “ICU transfer” OR (ICU AND (“transfer”/exp OR transfer)) OR ”ICU transition” OR (ICU AND (”transition”/exp OR transition))) AND (”nursing interventions” OR ((”nursing”/exp OR nursing) AND (”interventions”/exp OR interventions))) AND (”adults”/exp OR adults) | 27 |
CINAHL | |
((empowerment patient OR patient education OR patient information) AND (ICU discharge OR ICU transfer OR ICU transition) AND (nursing interventions) AND (adults)) | 2 |
Cochrane Library | |
((empowerment patient OR patient education OR patient information) AND (ICU discharge OR ICU transfer OR ICU transition) AND (nursing interventions) AND (adults)) | 30 |
CUIDEN Plus | |
((empowerment patient OR patient education OR patient information) AND (ICU discharge OR ICU transfer OR ICU transition) AND (nursing interventions) AND (adults)) | 1 |
LILACS | |
((empowerment patient OR patient education OR patient information) AND (ICU discharge OR ICU transfer OR ICU transition) AND (nursing interventions) AND (adults)) | 0 |
TOTAL | 274 |
Author, Year, Country | Population | Groups (n) | Intervention | Instrument * | Findings/Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bench 2015 UK | 158 patients (aged >18 years) in two ICUs in England. | CG 1 (59) CG 2 (48) EG (51) | There were three groups; EG received UCCDIP, comprising two booklets, one for the patient with a personalized discharge summary, and one for the family, given prior to discharge to the ward. CG 1 received the usual information and CG 2 received the booklet produced by the ICU steps. | HADS BCOPE PEI | There were no significant differences in psychological well-being measured using HADS, assessed at 5 ± 1 days post unit discharge and at 28 days/hospital discharge among the 3 groups. There were no differences in the other scales after intervention. |
Kleinpell 2004 USA | 100 patients (aged 65–95 years) in two ICUs of two Midwestern University medical centers. | CG (53) EG (47) | A DPQ was performed to assess discharge needs and define an early discharge planning nurse intervention with formal structured communication to the discharge planning nurse when the patient was transferred from the ICU. | Discharge Adequacy Rating Form SF-36 | Patients in the EG were more ready for discharge, more likely to report they had adequate information, and less concerned about managing their care at home than patients in the CG. They also better understood their medicines and danger signals indicating potential complications. |
Knowles 2009 UK | 36 patients (aged 18–85 years) discharged to medical/surgical wards at Royal Bolton Hospital, Lancashire. | CG (18) EG (18) | ICU diary, containing daily information about their physical condition, procedures and treatments, events occurring on the unit, and significant events from outside the unit. | HADS | Patients in the EG displayed significant decreases in both anxiety and depression compared to CG. |
Kuchi 2020 Iran | 84 patients (18–65 years of age) with coronary artery disease admitted to post-CCU wards in Tehran hospital. | CG (42) EG (42) | An information and education-based empowerment program following five stages: 1. Motivating patient self-awareness. 2. Assessing causes of problems. 3. Setting goals. 4. Developing personal self-care plans. 5. Assessing achievement of goals. | SAQ Perception of Risk of Heart Disease Scale. | There were significant differences between the two groups in total score of perceived risk and its subscales. The intervention changed patients’ attitudes toward risk-motivating behavior change and improving physical health. |
Wade 2019 UK | 1458 patients (>18 years of age) in 24 general ICUs in UK | CG (789) EG (669) | Nurse-led preventive psychological intervention for critically ill patients, comprising three phases: 1. Creating a therapeutic environment in ICU. 2. Three stress support sessions for patients screened as acutely stressed. 3. Relaxation and recovery program for patients screened as acutely stressed. | PTSD Symptom Scale–Self-Report. STAI-6. HrQoL | There were no significant differences in PTSD symptom severity at 6 months among groups. There were no differences in the other scales after intervention. |
Ramsay 2016 UK | 240 patients (>18 years of age) in Edinburgh, Scotland | CG (120) EG (120) | A complex intervention aimed towards post-ICU rehabilitation delivered between ICU and hospital discharge by dedicated rehabilitation assistants (RAs) working together with existing ward-based clinical teams. The intervention comprised: enhanced physiotherapy nutritional care information provision case-management | PEQ HRQoL SF-12 HADS Davidson’s Trauma Scale | The PEQ revealed significant differences between groups, suggesting greater patient satisfaction in the EG. Focus group data strongly supported and helped to explain these findings. There were no differences in the other scales after intervention. |
Demircelik 2015 Turkey | 100 patients, Turkish coronary ICU | CG (50) EG (50) | Multimedia nursing educational intervention. | HADS | There were significantly higher decreases in HADS scores in the EG. |
Bloom 2019 USA | 232 patients (≥18 years of age) at Vanderbilt University Hospital. | CG (121) EG (111) | Interdisciplinary ICU recovery program, comprising: inpatient visit by a nurse practitioner an informational pamphlet a 24/7 phone number for the recovery team an outpatient ICU recovery clinic visit with a critical care physician, nurse practitioner, pharmacist, psychologist, and case manager | Death and readmission rate | Hospital readmission after discharge at 7 days (3.6% vs. 11.6%) and 30 days (14.4% vs. 21.5%), median time to readmission (21.5 (IQR 11.5–26.2) vs. 7 (4–21.2) days) and the composite outcome of death or readmission within 30 days of hospital discharge (18% vs. 29.8%) were significantly better in the ICU recovery program group than in the usual care group. |
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Cuzco, C.; Torres-Castro, R.; Torralba, Y.; Manzanares, I.; Muñoz-Rey, P.; Romero-García, M.; Martínez-Momblan, M.A.; Martínez-Estalella, G.; Delgado-Hito, P.; Castro, P. Nursing Interventions for Patient Empowerment during Intensive Care Unit Discharge: A Systematic Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 11049. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111049
Cuzco C, Torres-Castro R, Torralba Y, Manzanares I, Muñoz-Rey P, Romero-García M, Martínez-Momblan MA, Martínez-Estalella G, Delgado-Hito P, Castro P. Nursing Interventions for Patient Empowerment during Intensive Care Unit Discharge: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(21):11049. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111049
Chicago/Turabian StyleCuzco, Cecilia, Rodrigo Torres-Castro, Yolanda Torralba, Isabel Manzanares, Pilar Muñoz-Rey, Marta Romero-García, Ma. Antonia Martínez-Momblan, Gemma Martínez-Estalella, Pilar Delgado-Hito, and Pedro Castro. 2021. "Nursing Interventions for Patient Empowerment during Intensive Care Unit Discharge: A Systematic Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 21: 11049. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111049
APA StyleCuzco, C., Torres-Castro, R., Torralba, Y., Manzanares, I., Muñoz-Rey, P., Romero-García, M., Martínez-Momblan, M. A., Martínez-Estalella, G., Delgado-Hito, P., & Castro, P. (2021). Nursing Interventions for Patient Empowerment during Intensive Care Unit Discharge: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(21), 11049. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111049