학술논문

Effect of a condolence letter on grief symptoms among relatives of patients who died in the ICU: a randomized clinical trial.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Intensive Care Medicine. Apr2017, Vol. 43 Issue 4, p473-484. 12p.
Subject
*Condolence notes
*Grief
*Mental depression
*Anxiety
*Post-traumatic stress disorder
*Patients
*Prevention of mental depression
*Prevention of post-traumatic stress disorder
*Families & psychology
*Age distribution
*Bereavement
*Comparative studies
*Empathy
*Intensive care units
*Research methodology
*Medical cooperation
*Medical personnel
*Multivariate analysis
*Psychological tests
*Research
*Sex distribution
*Time
*Attitudes toward death
*Evaluation research
*Randomized controlled trials
*Patients' families
*Odds ratio
Anxiety prevention
Writing
Language
ISSN
0342-4642
Abstract
Purpose: Family members of patients who die in the intensive care unit (ICU) may experience symptoms of stress, anxiety, depression, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and/or prolonged grief. We evaluated whether grief symptoms were alleviated if the physician and the nurse in charge at the time of death sent the closest relative a handwritten condolence letter.Methods: Multicenter randomized trial conducted among 242 relatives of patients who died at 22 ICUs in France between December 2014 and October 2015. Relatives were randomly assigned to receiving (n = 123) or not receiving (n = 119) a condolence letter. The primary endpoint was the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Score (HADS) at 1 month. Secondary endpoints included HADS, complicated grief (ICG), and PTSD-related symptoms (IES-R) at 6 months. Observers were blinded to group allocation.Results: At 1 month, 208 (85.9%) relatives completed the HADS; median score was 16 [IQR, 10-22] with and 14 [8-21.5] without the letter (P = 0.36). Although scores were higher in the intervention group, there were no significant differences regarding the HADS-depression subscale (8 [4-12] vs. 6 [2-12], mean difference 1.1 [-0.5 to 2.6]; P = 0.09) and prevalence of depression symptoms (56.0 vs. 42.4%, RR 0.76 [0.57-1.00]; P = 0.05). At 6 months, 190 (78.5%) relatives were interviewed. The intervention significantly increased the HADS (13 [7-19] vs. 10 [4-17.5], P = 0.04), HADS-depression subscale (6 [2-10] vs. 3 [1-9], P = 0.02), prevalence of depression symptoms (36.6 vs. 24.7%, P = 0.05) and PTSD-related symptoms (52.4 vs. 37.1%, P = 0.03).Conclusions: In relatives of patients who died in the ICU, a condolence letter failed to alleviate grief symptoms and may have worsened depression and PTSD-related symptoms. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT02325297. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]