Annals of Intensive Care (May 2024)

Family centeredness of care: a cross-sectional study in intensive care units part of the European society of intensive care medicine

  • Élie Azoulay,
  • Nancy Kentish-Barnes,
  • Carole Boulanger,
  • Giovanni Mistraletti,
  • Margo van Mol,
  • Gabriel Heras-La Calle,
  • Elisa Estenssoro,
  • Peter Vernon van Heerden,
  • Maria-Cruz Martin Delgado,
  • Anders Perner,
  • Yaseen M Arabi,
  • Sheila Nainan Myatra,
  • Jon Henrik Laake,
  • Jan J. De Waele,
  • Michael Darmon,
  • Maurizio Cecconi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13613-024-01307-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Purpose To identify key components and variations in family-centered care practices. Methods A cross-sectional study, conducted across ESICM members. Participating ICUs completed a questionnaire covering general ICU characteristics, visitation policies, team-family interactions, and end-of-life decision-making. The primary outcome, self-rated family-centeredness, was assessed using a visual analog scale. Additionally, respondents completed the Maslach Burnout Inventory and the Ethical Decision Making Climate Questionnaire to capture burnout dimensions and assess the ethical decision-making climate. Results The response rate was 53% (respondents from 359/683 invited ICUs who actually open the email); participating healthcare professionals (HCPs) were from Europe (62%), Asia (9%), South America (6%), North America (5%), Middle East (4%), and Australia/New Zealand (4%). The importance of family-centeredness was ranked high, median 7 (IQR 6–8) of 10 on VAS. Significant differences were observed across quartiles of family centeredness, including in visitation policies availability of a waiting rooms, family rooms, family information leaflet, visiting hours, night visits, sleep in the ICU, and in team-family interactions, including daily information, routine day-3 conference, and willingness to empower nurses and relatives. Higher family centeredness correlated with family involvement in rounds, participation in patient care and end-of-life practices. Burnout symptoms (41% of respondents) were negatively associated with family-centeredness. Ethical climate and willingness to empower nurses were independent predictors of family centeredness. Conclusions This study emphasizes the need to prioritize healthcare providers’ mental health for enhanced family-centered care. Further research is warranted to assess the impact of improving the ethical climate on family-centeredness.