• Critical care medicine · Dec 2024

    Predictors of ICU Surrogates' States of Concurrent Prolonged Grief, Post-Traumatic Stress, and Depression Symptoms.

    • Fur-Hsing Wen, Holly G Prigerson, Li-Pang Chuang, Wen-Chi Chou, Chung-Chi Huang, Tsung-Hui Hu, and Siew Tzuh Tang.
    • Department of International Business, Soochow University, Taiwan, ROC.
    • Crit. Care Med. 2024 Dec 1; 52 (12): 188518931885-1893.

    ObjectivesScarce research explores factors of concurrent psychologic distress (prolonged grief disorder [PGD], posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD], and depression). This study models surrogates' longitudinal, heterogenous grief-related reactions and multidimensional risk factors drawing from the integrative framework of predictors for bereavement outcomes (intrapersonal, interpersonal, bereavement-related, and death-circumstance factors), emphasizing clinical modifiability.DesignProspective cohort study.SettingMedical ICUs of two Taiwanese medical centers.SubjectsTwo hundred eighty-eight family surrogates.InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsFactors associated with four previously identified PGD-PTSD-depressive-symptom states (resilient, subthreshold depression-dominant, PGD-dominant, and PGD-PTSD-depression concurrent) were examined by multinomial logistic regression modeling (resilient state as reference). Intrapersonal: Prior use of mood medications correlated with the subthreshold depression-dominant state. Financial hardship and emergency department visits correlated with the PGD-PTSD-depression concurrent state. Higher anxiety symptoms correlated with the three more profound psychologic-distress states (adjusted odds ratio [95% CI] = 1.781 [1.562-2.031] to 2.768 [2.288-3.347]). Interpersonal: Better perceived social support was associated with the subthreshold depression-dominant state. Bereavement-related: Spousal loss correlated with the PGD-dominant state. Death circumstances: Provision of palliative care (8.750 [1.603-47.768]) was associated with the PGD-PTSD-depression concurrent state. Surrogate-perceived quality of patient dying and death as poor-to-uncertain (4.063 [1.531-10.784]) correlated with the subthreshold depression-dominant state, poor-to-uncertain (12.833 [1.231-133.775]), and worst (12.820 [1.806-91.013]) correlated with the PGD-PTSD-depression concurrent state. Modifiable social-worker involvement (0.004 [0.001-0.097]) and a do-not-resuscitate order issued before death (0.177 [0.032-0.978]) were negatively associated with the PGD-PTSD-depression concurrent and the subthreshold depression-dominant state, respectively. Apparent unmodifiable buffering factors included surrogates' higher educational attainment, married status, and longer time since loss.ConclusionsSurrogates' concurrent bereavement distress was positively associated with clinically modifiable factors: poor quality dying and death, higher surrogate anxiety, and palliative care-commonly provided late in the terminal-illness trajectory worldwide. Social-worker involvement and a do-not-resuscitate order appeared to mitigate risk.Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

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