Nearly half of hospitalized older adults need help communicating and
making healthcare decisions, and caregivers often experience stress
while helping their loved ones, researchers write in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine.
“Millions of older adults are admitted to the hospital each year,
and as the country’s population ages, this is going to be more
common,” said lead author Dr. Alexia Torke of the Indiana University
Center for Aging Research in Indianapolis.
Prior research has focused on patients in intensive care units
(ICUs), but the new study found high stress levels for family
decision-makers throughout the hospital, she told Reuters Health by
phone.
Torke and colleagues studied 364 adults, age 65 or older, and their
surrogate decision-makers in ICUs or internal medicine units at
three hospitals. Family members faced at least one tough decision
during the hospital stay about life-sustaining therapy such as
ventilator use or resuscitation orders, procedures or surgeries
requiring written informed consent, or placement in a nursing home.
At the start of the study and six weeks after the patient left the
hospital, researchers assessed levels of anxiety, depression and
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in the family decision-maker.
Decision-makers also filled out feedback surveys about the quality
of communication and emotional support they experienced, and their
satisfaction with decision-making during the relative’s
hospitalization and satisfaction with the hospital overall.
While their relative was hospitalized, decision-makers had fairly
high levels of anxiety and depression. But six to eight weeks
post-discharge, just 23 percent had lingering anxiety, about half of
them at a moderate to severe level. A total of 29 percent had mild
depression, about half had moderate to severe depression, and 14
percent had symptoms of PTSD.
Decision-makers who felt they received emotional support from
hospital workers were 35 percent less likely to have lingering
anxiety and 20 percent less likely to have ongoing depression,
compared to those who didn’t feel supported.
This effect was independent of family characteristics, anxiety
levels at the start of the study and whether the patient died, the
researchers note.
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Emotional support was also linked to lower likelihood of PTSD and
higher satisfaction with decision-making. In contrast, high
satisfaction with information communication was associated with
higher odds of PTSD, but also higher overall satisfaction with the
hospital.
“Family surrogates are going to be distressed after a hospital stay,
even if there’s good communication with hospital staff,” Torke said.
“What really matters is the emotional support.”
Future studies should look at ways to improve communication and
emotional support, the authors write. At Indiana University medical
centers, for example, a tool called the Family Navigator provides
health information and emotional support to family surrogates in the
ICU, Torke said.
“This should serve as a call-to-action for hospitals and healthcare
systems,” said Dr. J. Randall Curtis, a critical care specialist at
the University of Washington in Seattle, who wasn’t involved in the
study.
“What we really need are studies that identify specific approaches
that doctors, nurses, social workers and hospitals can use to
improve communication and emotional support,” he told Reuters Health
by email. “We need to demonstrate that these approaches work.”
Some studies show that condolence letters actually make symptoms
worse, he said. Instead, a trained social worker or palliative care
provider may provide the emotional support and communication that
patients and their loved ones really need.
“Having a seriously ill loved one is extremely stressful, and family
members of hospitalized patients should think about the way they can
get their communication needs met,” Curtis said. “If you are in this
situation, consider asking for help.”
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