Content area

Abstract

Purpose

We aimed to describe point of care communication encounters with patients' families in centers with open visitation practices.

Materials and methods

Cross-sectional one-day point prevalence study in 14 Canadian adult intensive care units (ICUs) located in 7 academic and 7 community hospitals with open family visitation policies.

Results

ICU bedside nurses working on a randomly selected weekday completed a survey reporting all observed communication between providers and patients' families. Family point of care communication encounters were measured for 146 of 159 patients (92%) admitted to the study ICUs. Most patients had family (98%) with the majority observed visiting on the study date (73%). Of patients with family (n = 143), direct in-person communication occurred 71% of the time, either via participation in rounds (23%), family meetings (24%), and/or informal updates (71%). 43% (n = 62) of families had direct communication with a physician or nurse practitioner. Nurses provided the largest portion of informal bedside updates (83%, n = 85) and supplemented family communication with phone calls (22%, n = 31). There was no communication contact for 13% (n = 19) of families.

Conclusions

ICUs adopt multiple ways of communicating with family members of critically ill patients. Significant interactions occur outside of traditional family meetings, in a less formal and more frequent fashion. Our study supports development of tools to support best practices within contemporary communication paradigms to support provider, patients and family needs.

Details

Title
Communication with patients' families in the intensive care unit: A point prevalence study
Author
Au, Selena S; Amanda L Roze des Ordons; Asma Amir Ali; Soo, Andrea; Stelfox, Henry T
Pages
235-238
Publication year
2019
Publication date
Dec 2019
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
08839441
e-ISSN
15578615
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2321598844
Copyright
©2019. Elsevier Inc.