Research Output
‘Intensive care unit survivorship’ - a constructivist grounded theory of surviving critical illness
  Aims & objective
To theorise ICU survivorship after a critical illness based on longitudinal qualitative data.
Background
Increasingly patients survive episodes of critical illness. However, the short and long term impact of critical illness include physical, psychological, social and economic challenges long after hospital discharge. An appreciation is emerging that care needs to extend beyond critical illness to enable patients to reclaim their lives post-discharge with the term ‘Survivorship’ being increasingly used in this context. What constitutes critical illness survivorship has, to date, not been theoretically explored.
Design
Longitudinal-qualitative and constructivist Grounded Theory. Interviews (n = 46) with 17 participants were conducted at four time points: (1) before discharge from hospital, (2) 4-6 weeks post-discharge, (3) 6 months and (4) 12 months post-discharge across two adult intensive care setting.
Method
Individual face-to-face interviews. Data analysis followed the principles of Charmaz's Constructivist Grounded Theory. ‘ICU survivorship’ emerged as the core category and was theorised using concepts such as Status Passages, Liminality and Temporality to understand the various transitions participants made post-critical illness.
Findings
Intensive care survivorship describes the unscheduled status passage of falling critically ill and being taken to the threshold of life and the journey to a life post-critical illness. Surviving critical illness goes beyond recovery; surviving means ‘moving on’ to life post-critical illness. ‘Moving on’ incorporates a re-definition of self that incorporates any lingering intensive care legacies and being in control of one's life again.
Relevance to clinical practice
For healthcare professionals and policy makers it is important to realise that recovery and transitioning through to survivorship happens within an individual's time frame, not a schedule imposed by the healthcare system. Currently there are no care pathways or policies in place for critical illness survivors that would support ICU survivors and their families in the transitions to survivorship.

  • Type:

    Article

  • Date:

    22 November 2016

  • Publication Status:

    Published

  • Publisher

    Wiley-Blackwell

  • DOI:

    10.1111/jocn.13659

  • ISSN:

    0962-1067

  • Library of Congress:

    RC Internal medicine

  • Dewey Decimal Classification:

    616 Diseases

  • Funders:

    NHS Lothian Health Service Research

Citation

Kean, S., Salisbury, L. G., Rattray, J., Walsh, T. S., Huby, G., & Ramsay, P. (2017). ‘Intensive care unit survivorship’ - a constructivist grounded theory of surviving critical illness. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 26(19-20), 3111-3124. https://doi.org/10.1111/jocn.13659

Authors

Keywords

Longitudinal; constructivist grounded theory; interviews; critical illness; intensive care; survivorship; recovery; status passages; liminality; temporality

Monthly Views:

Available Documents
  • pdf

    ICU survivorship - a constructivist grounded theory of surviving critical illness

    325KB

    This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: ean, S., Salisbury, L. G., Rattray, J., Walsh, T. S., Huby, G. and Ramsay, P. (2016), ‘ICU Survivorship’ - a constructivist grounded theory of surviving critical illness. J Clin Nurs. Accepted Author Manuscript. doi:10.1111/jocn.13659 which has been published in final form at http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jocn.13659 This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Self-Archiving.

  • Downloadable citations

    HTML BIB RTF