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- Lissi Hansen, Yi Yan, and Susan J Rosenkranz.
- Lissi Hansen is an associate professor, Yi Yan is a graduate student, and Susan J. Rosenkranz is a research associate in the School of Nursing at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland. hansenli@ohsu.edu.
- Am. J. Crit. Care. 2014 Nov 1; 23 (6): 510-5.
AbstractEnd-stage liver disease (ESLD), the final stage of chronic liver disease, is treated with liver transplant. Many patients have serious ESLD-related complications and are admitted to the intensive care unit for treatment. Such patients are temporarily unsuitable to undergo transplant surgery and are placed into a temporarily inactive category, "status 7," on the transplant waiting list. Status 7 patients account for about 15% of all patients on the list. To describe the experience of a status 7 patient on the liver transplant waiting list from the perspectives of family members, 38 hours of bedside observation of participants, 9 semistructured interviews with 6 family members, and 9 semistructured interviews with 8 health care professionals from nursing, medicine, and other health care disciplines were done. Data were analyzed via conventional content analysis. Family members' perspectives fit into 3 phases that correspond to the progression of the patient's clinical condition: dealing with crisis, confusion and frustration, and back on the road to transplant. All 3 phases related to 1 goal: getting the patient's status reactivated on the liver transplant waiting list. This case exposes the struggles that patients with ESLD and their families may go through during the status 7 period and could serve as a starting point for further examination of this period. ©2014 American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.
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