Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x24gv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-18T12:02:30.364Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Psychosocial Adaptation in Relatives of Critically Injured Patients Admitted to an Intensive Care Unit

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 April 2014

Agustín Martín Rodríguez*
Affiliation:
University of Seville
Mª Ángeles Pérez San Gregorio
Affiliation:
University of Seville
*
Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Agustín Martín Rodríguez, University of Seville, Dept. of Psychology, C/ Camilo José Cela, s/n, Seville, 41018, Spain. E-mail: amartinr@us.es.

Abstract

The aim of this study is to analyze how the length of time a patient spends in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) affects close relatives, with regard to specific clinical variables of personality, family relationships and fear of death. The study group consisted of 57 relatives of seriously ill patients admitted to the ICU of “Virgen del Rocío” Rehabilitation and Trauma Hospital (Seville, Spain). The instruments applied were: a psychosocial questionnaire, clinical analysis questionnaire, family environment scale and fear of death scale. The relatives of patients admitted to ICU obtained higher scores in hypochondria, suicidal depression, agitation, anxious depression, guilt-resentment, paranoia, psychasthenia, psychological maladjustment and self-expression, and less in fear of their own death, as when compared to interviews with the same relatives 4 years later. The length of time a patient spent in the ICU influenced relatives in some clinical variables of personality, family relationships and fear of death.

Hemos analizado la influencia del tiempo transcurrido desde el ingreso del paciente en la UCI en sus familiares mas allegados, sobre determinadas variables clínicas de personalidad, las relaciones familiares y el temor experimentado ante la muerte. La muestra estaba formada por 57 familiares de pacientes traumatizados graves ingresados en la UCI de Traumatología. Hemos empleado una encuesta psicosocial y los siguientes instrumentos: Cuestionario de Análisis Clínico, Escala de Clima Social en la Familia y Escala de Temor a la Muerte. Los familiares de pacientes ingresados en la UCI, comparados con los mismos familiares cuatro años después del ingreso, obtienen puntuaciones más elevadas en hipocondria, depresión suicida, agitación, depresión ansiosa, culpabilidad-resentimiento, paranoia, psicastenia, desajuste psicológico y expresividad, y menor en el temor al proceso de morir propio. El tiempo transcurrido desde el ingreso del paciente en la UCI ejerce una influencia sobre sus familiares en algunas variables clínicas de personalidad, las relaciones familiares y el temor experimentado ante la muerte.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Affleck, G., Tennen, H., & Rowe, J. (1990). Mothers, fathers, and the crisis of newborn intensive care. Infant Mental Health Journal, 1, 1225.3.0.CO;2-P>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anguera, B. (1978). Aproximación psicológica al problema del lesionado medular traumático. [Psychological Aspects of the Traumatically Injured Spine.]. Anuario de Psicología, 19, 525.Google Scholar
American Psychiatric Association (1994). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (4th ed.). Barcelona: Masson.Google Scholar
Bennun, I. (1999). Intensive care units: A systemic perspective. Journal of Family Therapy, 1, 96112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benoliel, J. (1985). Loss and terminal illness. Nursing Clinics of North America, 2, 439448.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breslau, N., Staruch, K.S., & Mortimer, E.A. (1982). Psychological distress in mothers with disabled children. American Journal of Diseases of Children, 132, 682686.Google Scholar
Brooks, R., Kerridge, R., Hillman, K, Bauman, A., & Daffurn, K. (1997). Quality of life outcomes after intensive care. Intensive Care Medicine, 23, 581586.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Broome, M.F. (1985). Working with the family of a critically ill child. Heart and Lung, 17, 682688.Google Scholar
Capuzzo, M., Bianconi, M., Contu, P., Pavoni, V., & Gritti, G. (1996). Survival and quality of life after intensive care. Intensive Care Medicine, 22, 947953.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dörr-Zegers, O. (1988). Espacio y tiempo en la unidad de cuidado intensivo. [Space and Time in the Intensive Care Unit.]. Actas Luso-Españolas de Neurología y Psiquiatría, 4, 246254.Google Scholar
Eisdofer, C., Kennedy, G., Wisnieski, W., & Cohen, D. (1980). Depression and attributional style in families coping with the stress of caring for a relative with Alzheimer's disease. Gerontologist, 20, 649655.Google Scholar
Flórez, J.A. (2001). Aspectos psicoafectivos del enfermo terminal: Atención ética integral. [Psycho affective aspects of the terminally ill: Basic ethics.]. Barcelona: Astrazeneca.Google Scholar
Frías, R. (1994). El estrés en las UCI.]Stress in the ICU.]. Madrid: Universidad de Alcalá.Google Scholar
Fuller-Jonap, F., & Haley, W.E. (1995). Mental and physical healthy of male caregivers of a spouse with Alzheimer's disease. Journal Aging Health, 7, 99118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gafo, J., Vidal, M., Gil, E., Urraca, S., Higuera, G., Fernández, J.M., et al. (1984). La eutanasia y el derecho a morir con dignidad. [Euthanasia and the right to die with dignity.]. Madrid: Paulina.Google Scholar
Gómez, E., López, M.A., & Cirera, E. (1997). El paciente en cuidados intensivos. [The patient in intensive care.]. In Rojo, J.E. & Cirera, E. (Eds.), Interconsulta psiquátrica (pp. 469477). Barcelona: Masson.Google Scholar
Holmes-Garret, C. (1990). The crisis of the forgotten family: A single session group in the ICU waiting room. Social Work with Groups, 4, 141157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jay, S. (1977). Pediatric intensive care: Involving parents in the care of their child. Maternal-Child Nursing Journal, 8, 195204.Google Scholar
Kendell, J.H., Slyter, H., & Klaus, M.H. (1970). The mourning response of parents to the death of newborn infant. New England Journal of Medicine, 283, 344349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, A.C., Oka, R.K., & Young, D.R. (1994). Ambulatory blood pressure and heart rate responses to the stress of work and care giving in older women. Journal of Gerontology, 49, 239245.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krugg, S.S. (1987). Cuestionario de Análisis Clínico. [Clinical Analysis Questionairre.]. Madrid: TEA Ediciones, S.A.Google Scholar
Moos, R.H., Moos, B.S., & Trickett, E.J. (1989). Escalas de Clima Social: Familia, Trabajo, Instituciones Penitenciarias, Centro Escolar. [Family Environment Scales: Family, Work, Penitentiary System, Schools.]. Madrid: TEA Ediciones, S.A.Google Scholar
Pérez, M.A. (2001). Apoyo psicológico en cuidados intensivos. [Psychological support in intensive care.]. In Torres, L.M. (Ed.), Tratado de cuidados críticos y emergencias (Vol. 1, pp. 157170). Madrid: Arán Ediciones, S.L.Google Scholar
Pérez, M.A., & Lozano, J.F. (1994). Intervención psicológica en medicina: Familiares de pacientes críticos y crónicos. [Psychological intervention in medicine: Relatives of critical and chronic patients.]. In Garrido, M. & García, J. (Eds.), Psicoterapia: Modelos Contemporáneos y Aplicaciones (pp. 661694). Valencia: Promolibro.Google Scholar
Pérez, M.A., Murillo, F., Dominguez, J.M., & Nuñez, A. (1992). Personalidad, tipología familiar, nivel de religiosidad y actitudes hacia el cuerpo y la muerte en los familiares de pacientes ingresados en UCI. [Personality, family characteristics, religiousness and attitudes towards the body and death in relatives of ICU patients.]. Anales de Psiquiatría, 10, 405410.Google Scholar
Rothstein, P. (1980). Psychological stress in families of children in a pediatric intensive care unit. Pediatric Clinics of North America, 27, 613620.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schulz, R., O'Brien, A.T., Bookwala, J., & Fleissner, K. (1995). Psychiatric and physical morbidity effects of dementia care giving prevalence, correlates, and causes. Gerontologist, 25, 771791.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Townsend, A., Noelker, L., Deimling, G., & Bass, D. (1989). Longitudinal impact of interhousehold care giving on adult children's mental health. Psychological Aging, 29, 393401.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Urraca, S. (1981). Actitudes ante la muerte (preocupación, ansiedad y temor) y religiosidad. [Attitudes regarding death (worry, anxiety and fear) and religiousness.] Unpublished Doctoral Thesis. Universidad Complutense, Madrid.Google Scholar
Vázquez, G. (1996). Calidad de vida. Un instrumento para medir la efectividad de los SMI. [Quality of life. An instrument for measuring SMI effectiveness.] Revista de Calidad Asistencial, 11, 7073.Google Scholar
Vázquez, G., Rivera, R., Pérez, A., González, A., Fernández, E., & Navarrete, P. (1996). Analysis of quality of life in polytraumatized patients two years after discharge from an intensive care unit. The Journal of Trauma, 2, 326332.Google Scholar
Vitaliano, P.P., Russo, J., & Niaura, R. (1995). Plasma lipids and their relationships with psychosocial factors in older adults. Journals of Gerontology, 50, 1824.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zarén, M.D., & Hedstrand, M.D. (1987). Quality of life among long-term survivors of intensive care. Critical Care Medicine, 8, 743747.CrossRefGoogle Scholar