Barriers to family participation in ICU rounds exist at the health care system level (e.g., restriction on visitation, infection control) and the individual level (e.g., caretaker role, illness, disability, inability to miss work). While virtual family participation in ICU rounds may contribute to addressing these barriers, its feasibility, impact, and effectiveness are yet unknown. The primary objective of this study is to assess the feasibility of virtual family participation in adult ICU rounds. The secondary objectives are: to assess the effect size of virtual family participation in ICU rounds on family engagement, satisfaction, and anxiety and depression; and to explore family and physician experiences of family participation in ICU rounds. This will be a pilot prospective trial of 72 family members at 4 Canadian adult ICUs, with an embedded qualitative study that will sample family members and critical care physicians. The primary outcome will reflect feasibility metrics (i.e., recruitment, uptake, technical, and follow-up). Secondary outcomes include data regarding family engagement, satisfaction, mental health, and perceived experiences of participation in ICU rounds. This study will assess the feasibility of conducting a larger, hypothesis-testing randomized controlled trial to assess virtual family participation in adult ICU rounds.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
84
Virtual participation in daily ICU team rounds
Jewish General Hospital
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Recruitment rate of 3 participants per month per site completing initial FAME questionnaire
Recruitment rate
Time frame: 6 months
% of participants completing at least one virtual rounding session
Uptake
Time frame: Within 1-week of ICU discharge
% of virtual rounds without technical issues
Technical issues
Time frame: Within 1-week of ICU discharge
% of participants completing follow-up
Follow-up of participants
Time frame: Within 1-week of ICU discharge
Family satisfaction as measured by FS-ICU 24R
Family satisfaction
Time frame: Within 1-week of ICU discharge
Anxiety and depression as measured by HADS
Anxiety and depression
Time frame: Within 1-week of ICU discharge
Family care engagement as measured by FAME
Family care engagement
Time frame: Within 1-week of ICU discharge
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