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Family Information Management in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU-Families)

M

Medical University of Graz

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Extended Family

Treatments

Other: Placebo
Other: ICU Families Website

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02931851
ICU-Families 1.0

Details and patient eligibility

About

Relatives in intensive care units (ICU) are important partners in decision-making in the treatment of critically ill patients and provide a significant resource in the care and recovery of patients. Therefore, a professional, educational intervention targeting these caregivers may have fundamental benefits with little risk. As in other fields, information is searched in the internet, but this unselected information is often overwhelming and of little use in this context.

Symptoms of anxiety, stress and depression are common in affected relatives. The majority of family members report some level of anxiety, depression and stress, sometimes even resulting in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Importantly, an association between lack of information and post-traumatic stress disorder PTSD has been reported. The large number of potentially affected families poses a particular challenge to healthcare and may cause substantial secondary costs to national economy.

Full description

Design:

  1. Phase: Empirical study (quantitative) of information needs - semi-structured interviews with family members, physicians and caregivers
  2. Phase: Development of user friendly homepage with University of Applied Sciences Joanneum and validation of the homepage with medical professionals and laypersons
  3. Phase: Randomized Controlled Trial (non-blinded) with "placebo home page" (N=110)

Background:

Relatives in intensive care units (ICU) are important partners in decision-making in the treatment of critically ill patients and provide a significant resource in the care and recovery of patients. Therefore, a professional, educational intervention targeting these caregivers may have fundamental benefits with little to no risk. As in other fields, information is searched in the internet, but this unselected information is often overwhelming and of little use in this context.

In Austria there are 2784 systemized intensive care beds with an average occupation of 3,6 days, representing 100 new admissions per year/ICU bed. This may translate to 500.000 affected family members per year.

The role of family members in the treatment process of ICU patients is a not very well studied subject, especially in German-speaking countries. In contrast, in the Anglo-American world, family members play a key role in the medical, financial and legal aspects of the treatment process and have a decisive role in the successful treatment during and after critical illness.

Symptoms of anxiety, stress and depression are common in affected relatives . The majority of family members report some level of anxiety, depression and stress, sometimes even resulting in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Importantly, an association between lack of information and post-traumatic stress disorder PTSD has been reported. The large number of potentially affected families poses a particular challenge to healthcare and may cause substantial secondary costs to national economy.

The participation of relatives in the decision making process of ICU patients is negatively affected by the uncertainty concerning the treatment path, medical procedures and consequences for the families' life after ICU discharge. This likely leads to unnecessary hospital readmissions, complicates rehabilitation of patients and requires adapted management strategies for relatives. Therefore, it is important to provide sufficient information to families in high quality.

The relationship management with relatives places significant demands on ICU staff and conflicts between physicians and relatives are common. So far, only a few randomized intervention studies have been performed in this setting, but with promising results.

The internet has revolutionized our world including the access to medical information. In one study, almost 50% of ICU patients' family members used the internet for information purposes within the first days of ICU treatment. This makes a web-based intervention in this setting very promising. To our knowledge however, no RCT has yet evaluated the usefulness of a web-based intervention on ICU patients' family members' quality of life.

The following question should therefore be answered by our study:

  • Does targeted information and communication using new media (INTERVENTION) have a beneficial influence on subjective and objective endpoints of patients and their families?
  • Could this help in averting the negative effects of anxiety, stress, and depression? Are new media accepted in clinical routine?
  • Does the project support the affected family members in their health literacy?

Enrollment

75 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 100 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • anticipated further ICU stay ≥3 days (index patient)

Exclusion criteria

  • lack of Basic Information Technology (IT) user knowledge or German language skills
  • DNR (Do not resuscitate) orders (index patient)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

75 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Placebo
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Standard Information
Treatment:
Other: Placebo
Intervention
Active Comparator group
Description:
Professionally developed website for relatives of ICU patients
Treatment:
Other: ICU Families Website

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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