Psychological effects of remote-only communication among reference persons of ICU patients during COVID-19 pandemic

Abstract Background During COVID-19 pandemic, visits have been prohibited in most French ICUs. Psychological effects, for reference persons (RPs), of remote-only communication have been assessed. Methods All RPs of patients referred to ICU for COVID-19 were included. HADS, IES-R, and satisfaction we...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jessy Cattelan, Sara Castellano, Hamid Merdji, Jean Audusseau, Baptiste Claude, Léa Feuillassier, Sibylle Cunat, Marc Astrié, Camille Aquin, Guillaume Buis, Edgar Gehant, Amandine Granier, Hassiba Kercha, Camille Le Guillou, Guillaume Martin, Kevin Roulot, Ferhat Meziani, Olivier Putois, Julie Helms
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-01-01
Series:Journal of Intensive Care
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40560-020-00520-w
Description
Summary:Abstract Background During COVID-19 pandemic, visits have been prohibited in most French ICUs. Psychological effects, for reference persons (RPs), of remote-only communication have been assessed. Methods All RPs of patients referred to ICU for COVID-19 were included. HADS, IES-R, and satisfaction were evaluated at admission, discharge/death, and 3 months. At 3 months, a psychologist provided a qualitative description of RPs’ psychological distress. Results Eighty-eight RPs were included. Prevalence of anxiety and depression was 83% and 73% respectively. At 3 months, lower HADS decrease was associated with patient death/continued hospitalization, and/or sleeping disorders in RPs (p < 0.01). Ninety-nine percent RPs felt the patient was safe (9 [7; 10]/10 points, Likert-type scale), confident with caregivers (10 [9; 10]/10 points), and satisfied with information provided (10 [9; 10]/10 points). All RPs stressed the specific-type of “responsibility” associated with being an RP in a remote-only context, leading RPs to develop narrow diffusion strategies (67%) and restrict the array of contacted relatives to a very few and/or only contacting them rarely. 10 RPs (30%) related the situation to a prior traumatic experience. Conclusion RPs experienced psychological distress and reported that being an RP in a remote-only communication context was a specific responsibility and qualified it as an overall negative experience. Trial registration NCT04385121 . Registered 12 May 2020. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ .
ISSN:2052-0492