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Manning_et_al-2014-Nursing_in_Critical_Care.pdf (670.81 kB)

Long-term psychosocial impact reported by childhood critical illness survivors: a systematic review

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posted on 2023-07-26, 13:36 authored by Joseph C. Manning, Pippa Hemingway, Sarah A. Redsell
Aim: To undertake a qualitative systematic review that explores psychological and social impact, reported directly from children and adolescents at least 6 months after their critical illness. Background: Significant advances in critical care have reduced mortality from childhood critical illness, with the majority of patients being discharged alive. However, it is widely reported that surviving critical illness can be traumatic for both children and their family. Despite a growing body of literature in this field, the psychological and social impact of life threatening critical illness on child and adolescent survivors, more than 6 months post event, remains under-reported. Data sources: Searches of six online databases were conducted up to February 2012. Review methods: Predetermined criteria were used to select studies. Methodological quality was assessed using a standardized checklist. An adapted version of the thematic synthesis approach was applied to extract, code and synthesize data. Findings: Three studies met the inclusion criteria, which were all of moderate methodological quality. Initial coding and synthesis of data resulted in five descriptive themes: confusion and uncertainty, other people’s narratives, focus on former self and normality, social isolation and loss of identity, and transition and transformation. Further synthesis culminated in three analytical themes that conceptualize the childhood survivors’ psychological and social journey following critical illness. Conclusions: Critical illness in childhood can expose survivors to a complex trajectory of recovery, with enduring psychosocial adversity manifesting in the long term. Nurses and other health professionals must be aware and support the potential multifaceted psychosocial needs that may arise. Parents and families are identified as fundamental in shaping psychological and social well-being of survivors. Therefore intensive care nurses must take opportunities to raise parents’ awareness of the journey of survival and provide appropriate support. Further empirical research is warranted to explore the deficits identified with the existing literature.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

19

Issue number

3

Page range

145-156

Publication title

Nursing in Critical Care

ISSN

1478-5153

Publisher

Wiley

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Legacy posted date

2015-04-15

Legacy creation date

2018-03-01

Legacy Faculty/School/Department

ARCHIVED Faculty of Health, Social Care & Education (until September 2018)

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