Michael Hill-Oliva , Srinivas Medavarapu MBBS , Deeksha Chada MPH , Maggie Keogh MEd , Errol Gordon MD , Stephan A. Mayer MD , Neha S. Dangayach MD MSCR
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Surrogates often provide substituted judgement for neurologically critically ill patients. Resilience and spirituality are understudied constructs in this patient population.
In this study we examine how accurately surrogates estimate measures of resilience and spirituality for neurologically critically ill patients.
Methods
A convenience sample of English/Spanish speaking neurologically critically ill patient-surrogate dyads was enrolled from March 2016 to 2018. Questionnaires related to resilience (CD-RISC-10), spiritual wellbeing (positive Brief R-COPE), and spiritual turmoil (negative Brief R-cope) were completed by patients for themselves and surrogates on behalf of patients while in the Neurosciences Intensive Care Unit. Responses were evaluated by Spearman's rank-order correlation, Bland-Altman analysis and Cohen's weighted kappa.
Results
51 dyads were included. No correlation was found between patient and surrogate CD-RISC-10 (0.17, p = 0.238); moderate, positive correlations for positive (0.47, p < 0.001) and negative (0.33, p = 0.021) Brief R-COPE. Mean differences between patient and surrogate scores were low for CD-RISC-10 (−1.0 point), positive R-COPE (− 0.14 point), and negative R-COPE (0.02 point) suggesting lack of bias towards over/under-estimation. Kappa scores demonstrate fair inter-rater agreement for positive/negative R-COPE and no agreement for CD-RISC-10.
Conclusion
Surrogate evaluations lack systematic bias, but may not estimate resilience and spirituality reliably for neurologically critically ill patients.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Critical Care, the official publication of the World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine (WFSICCM), is a leading international, peer-reviewed journal providing original research, review articles, tutorials, and invited articles for physicians and allied health professionals involved in treating the critically ill. The Journal aims to improve patient care by furthering understanding of health systems research and its integration into clinical practice.
The Journal will include articles which discuss:
All aspects of health services research in critical care
System based practice in anesthesiology, perioperative and critical care medicine
The interface between anesthesiology, critical care medicine and pain
Integrating intraoperative management in preparation for postoperative critical care management and recovery
Optimizing patient management, i.e., exploring the interface between evidence-based principles or clinical insight into management and care of complex patients
The team approach in the OR and ICU
System-based research
Medical ethics
Technology in medicine
Seminars discussing current, state of the art, and sometimes controversial topics in anesthesiology, critical care medicine, and professional education
Residency Education.