Family Survey of Understanding and Communication of Patient Prognosis in the Intensive Care Unit: Identifying Training Opportunities.

2020 
Objective Family members making medical decisions for critically ill patients depend on surgeons’ high-quality communication. We aimed to assess family experience of communication in the trauma intensive care unit (TICU), identify opportunities for improvement, and tailor resident communication training to address deficiencies. Design We designed surveys based on our Conceptual Model of Surgeon Communication and Family Understanding, using items from previously validated tools to assess (1) family well-being, experiences of care, access to information, and assessment of patient condition and prognosis; and (2) surgeon and nursing assessment of patient condition and prognosis. Setting Level I TICU in an independent academic medical center. Participants Adult family members of patients hospitalized in the TICU > 24 hours; 88 families, 22 residents, 9 attendings, 81 nurses completed surveys on 78 unique patients. Results Family indicated: (1) they had easy access to medical information (91%); (2) the doctors (89%) and nurses (99%) listened carefully (p = 0.013); (3) they were included in morning rounds (80%); and (4) the doctors (91%) and nurses (98%) explained things well (p = 0.041). Family-surgeon agreement regarding the patient's condition and chance of cure was poor (28%) and fair (58%) respectively; families were typically more pessimistic than the surgeon regarding the patient's condition (65%), and more optimistic regarding chance of cure (26%). Residents cited mentors and skills practice with simulated patients as most influential training elements on communication style. Conclusions Although families reported high-quality communication with the surgical team and rated physicians well in attributes related to trust, significant discordance in surgeon-family understanding of the patient's condition and prognosis persisted. This may be related to physician difficulty communicating complex information, or a family member's distress resulting in cognitive compromise, coupled with coping through hope and optimism. We recommend ongoing communication training for residents, skills practice for mentors, and open communication between nursing and physicians to optimize family information access.
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