BMJ Open (Oct 2021)

Recovery, rehabilitation and follow-up services following critical illness: an updated UK national cross-sectional survey and progress report

  • Ceri Battle,
  • Anthony Bastin,
  • Bronwen Connolly,
  • Tara Quasim,
  • Carl Waldmann,
  • Joanne McPeake,
  • Margaret Phillips,
  • Martin Davies,
  • Andrew Slack,
  • Andrew Ferguson,
  • Elizabeth Wilson,
  • Greg Barton,
  • Suzanne Bench,
  • Dorothy Wade,
  • Sarah Linford,
  • Joel Meyer,
  • Judith Merriweather,
  • Gordon Sturmey,
  • Danielle Bear,
  • Rhian Milton-Cole,
  • Claire Adams,
  • Jon Silversides,
  • Penny Firshmann,
  • Melanie Gager,
  • Julie Highfield,
  • Jack Parry-Jones,
  • Helen Sanger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-052214
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10

Abstract

Read online

Objective To comprehensively update and survey the current provision of recovery, rehabilitation and follow-up services for adult critical care patients across the UK.Design Cross-sectional, self-administered, predominantly closed-question, electronic, online survey.Setting Institutions providing adult critical care services identified from national databases.Participants Multiprofessional critical care clinicians delivering services at each site.Results Responses from 176 UK hospital sites were included (176/242, 72.7%). Inpatient recovery and follow-up services were present at 127/176 (72.2%) sites, adopting multiple formats of delivery and primarily delivered by nurses (n=115/127, 90.6%). Outpatient services ran at 130 sites (73.9%), predominantly as outpatient clinics. Most services (n=108/130, 83.1%) were co-delivered by two or more healthcare professionals, typically nurse/intensive care unit (ICU) physician (n=29/130, 22.3%) or nurse/ICU physician/physiotherapist (n=19/130, 14.6%) teams. Clinical psychology was most frequently lacking from inpatient or outpatient services. Lack of funding was consistently the primary barrier to service provision, with other barriers including logistical and service prioritisation factors indicating that infrastructure and profile for services remain inadequate. Posthospital discharge physical rehabilitation programmes were relatively few (n=31/176, 17.6%), but peer support services were available in nearly half of responding institutions (n=85/176, 48.3%). The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in either increasing, decreasing or reformatting service provision. Future plans for long-term service transformation focus on expansion of current, and establishment of new, outpatient services.Conclusion Overall, these data demonstrate a proliferation of recovery, follow-up and rehabilitation services for critically ill adults in the past decade across the UK, although service gaps remain suggesting further work is required for guideline implementation. Findings can be used to enhance survivorship for critically ill adults, inform policymakers and commissioners, and provide comparative data and experiential insights for clinicians designing models of care in international healthcare jurisdictions.