Objective: To explore recurrent themes in diaries kept by intensive care unit (ICU) staff during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Design: Qualitative study. Setting: Two ICUs in a tertiary level hospital (Milan, Italy) from January to December 2021. Methods: ICU staff members wrote a digital diary while caring for adult patients hospitalized in the intensive care unit for >48 hours. A thematic analysis was performed. Findings: Diary entries described what happened and expressed emotions. Thematic analysis of 518 entries gleaned from 48 diaries identified four themes (plus ten subthemes): Presenting (Places and people; Diary project), Intensive Care Unit Stay (Clinical events; What the patient does; Patient support), Outside the Hospital (Family and topical events; The weather), Feelings and Thoughts (Encouragement and wishes; Farewell; Considerations). Conclusion: The themes were similar to published findings. They offer insight into care in an intensive care unit during a pandemic, with scarce resources and no family visitors permitted, reflecting on the patient as a person and on daily care. The staff wrote farewell entries to dying patients even though no one would read them. Implications for clinical practice: The implementation of digital diaries kept by intensive care unit staff is feasible even during the COVID-19 pandemic. Diaries kept by staff can provide a tool to humanize critical care. Staff can improve their work by reflecting on diary records.
Thematic analysis of intensive care unit diaries kept by staff: insights for caring / A. Galazzi, M. Bruno, F. Binda, G. Caddeo, M. Chierichetti, P. Roselli, G. Grasselli, D. Laquintana. - In: INTENSIVE & CRITICAL CARE NURSING. - ISSN 0964-3397. - 76:(2023), pp. 103392.1-103392.7. [10.1016/j.iccn.2023.103392]
Thematic analysis of intensive care unit diaries kept by staff: insights for caring
G. GrasselliPenultimo
;
2023
Abstract
Objective: To explore recurrent themes in diaries kept by intensive care unit (ICU) staff during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Design: Qualitative study. Setting: Two ICUs in a tertiary level hospital (Milan, Italy) from January to December 2021. Methods: ICU staff members wrote a digital diary while caring for adult patients hospitalized in the intensive care unit for >48 hours. A thematic analysis was performed. Findings: Diary entries described what happened and expressed emotions. Thematic analysis of 518 entries gleaned from 48 diaries identified four themes (plus ten subthemes): Presenting (Places and people; Diary project), Intensive Care Unit Stay (Clinical events; What the patient does; Patient support), Outside the Hospital (Family and topical events; The weather), Feelings and Thoughts (Encouragement and wishes; Farewell; Considerations). Conclusion: The themes were similar to published findings. They offer insight into care in an intensive care unit during a pandemic, with scarce resources and no family visitors permitted, reflecting on the patient as a person and on daily care. The staff wrote farewell entries to dying patients even though no one would read them. Implications for clinical practice: The implementation of digital diaries kept by intensive care unit staff is feasible even during the COVID-19 pandemic. Diaries kept by staff can provide a tool to humanize critical care. Staff can improve their work by reflecting on diary records.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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