» Articles » PMID: 24986172

Traditional/restrictive Vs Patient-centered Intensive Care Unit Visitation: Perceptions of Patients' Family Members, Physicians, and Nurses

Overview
Journal Am J Crit Care
Specialties Critical Care
Nursing
Date 2014 Jul 3
PMID 24986172
Citations 16
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Patient-centered intensive care units (ICUs) are advocated by professional organizations for critical care nursing and medicine. The patient-centered ICU paradigm recognizes the patient-family unit as inseparable and supports visitation designed to meet the needs of patients and patients' families.

Objectives: To understand perceptions about patient-centered ICUs among patients' family members, physicians, and nurses from 5 ICUs that had restrictive visitation and to guide development of a patient-centered, open visitation paradigm.

Methods: Patients' family members, nurses, and physicians from 5 ICUs with a traditional/restrictive visitation policy at a southeastern academic, tertiary care hospital were invited to participate in focus group meetings to understand perceptions about patient-centered care. All qualitative work was taped, transcribed, reviewed, and corrected after each session. Corrected transcripts and observer notes were integrated and coded.

Results: Patients' families identified facilitators of patient-centeredness as nurses' and physicians' communication, concern, compassion, closeness, and flexibility. However, competing roles of control over the patient's health care served as barriers to a patient-centered paradigm.

Conclusions: Patient-centered care is an expectation among patients, patients' families, and health quality advocates. These exploratory methods increased understanding of the powerful perceptions of family members, physicians, and nurses involved with patient care and provided direction to plan interventions to implement patient-centered, family-supportive ICU services.

Citing Articles

Caregiver and care team perspectives of caregiver psychological distress and well-being during critical care hospitalization: a qualitative study.

Blok A, Gauntlett L, Jayaram M, Krein S BMC Geriatr. 2025; 25(1):167.

PMID: 40082775 PMC: 11905728. DOI: 10.1186/s12877-025-05769-0.


Assessment of Family Satisfaction with Remote Communication for Critically Ill COVID-19 Patients: An Observational Cohort Study.

Varghese M, Selwyn T, Nair S, Samuel S, Chacko B, Pichamuthu K Indian J Crit Care Med. 2023; 27(8):537-544.

PMID: 37636852 PMC: 10452773. DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24504.


Physician perceptions of restrictive visitor policies during the COVID-19 pandemic: a qualitative study.

Wentlandt K, Wolofsky K, Weiss A, Hurlburt L, Fan E, Zimmermann C CMAJ Open. 2023; 11(1):E110-E117.

PMID: 36750247 PMC: 9911125. DOI: 10.9778/cmajo.20220048.


Efficacy and safety of unrestricted visiting policy for critically ill patients: a meta-analysis.

Wu Y, Wang G, Zhang Z, Fan L, Ma F, Yue W Crit Care. 2022; 26(1):267.

PMID: 36064613 PMC: 9446669. DOI: 10.1186/s13054-022-04129-3.


Challenges in implementation of patient-centred care in cardiac care unit: A qualitative study.

Charosaei F, Rostami S, Esmaeili M, Molavynejad S, Vanaki Z Nurs Open. 2022; 10(2):838-849.

PMID: 36057965 PMC: 9834141. DOI: 10.1002/nop2.1352.