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Communicating prognostic information and hope to families of dying patients in intensive care units: A descriptive qualitative study
Author(s) -
Almansour Issa,
Abdel Razeq Nadin M.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/jocn.15630
Subject(s) - checklist , qualitative research , nursing , intensive care , focus group , medicine , content analysis , relevance (law) , health care , end of life care , descriptive research , psychology , family medicine , palliative care , marketing , sociology , intensive care medicine , social science , political science , economics , law , business , cognitive psychology , economic growth , statistics , mathematics
Aims and objectives To understand how prognostic information is communicated by Jordanian doctors and nurses to the families of dying patients in intensive care units, with an emphasis on exploring how hope and truth telling about patients' poor prognosis are managed. Background Improving end‐of‐life care requires a focus on adequate family–professionals prognostic communication, while maintaining a realistic level of hope and family support. Design A descriptive qualitative approach was applied. Methods Semi‐structured interviews were conducted with 20 nurses and 15 resident doctors caring for dying patients. Bardin's procedure of categorical content analysis was applied. The COREQ checklist for reporting qualitative studies was followed. Results Two main categories emerged from the data of this study: ‘perspectives on optimistic hope’ and ‘approaches to prognostic communication’. Health professionals experience extreme difficulty, and therefore, frequently avoid openly disclosing information about patients' poor prognosis to the families. Consequently, the health professionals adopted various methods to balance truth telling against sustaining hope among the patients' families. Providing false assurance was perceived as permissible and understandable, in order to nurture the families' hope. Conclusions Improving end‐of‐life care in intensive care units in Jordan requires a focus on family–professional communication. Jordanian intensive care doctors and nurses perceived honest family–professional communication regarding dying patients to be extremely challenging. Healthcare professionals should develop their competency of meeting the informational and emotional needs of patients in ICUs and their families, while also honouring their cultural values, during prognostic communication. Relevance to clinical practice Effective training of healthcare professionals is vital on ways to enhance communication of prognostic information and to foster realistic hope among families of dying patients in intensive care units. There is a need to also explore the families' perspectives on prognostic communication in order to understand the similarities and differences between the professionals' and families' perspectives.