Flexible visiting practices have the potential to engage and benefit both the family and the patient. Family members can have the proximity they desire at a time that suits them and patients frequently find the presence of their family supportive and comforting in the highly medicalised, Intensive Care Unit (ICU) environment. Despite limited memory of their time in ICU, patients use words such as “help”, “safety” and “comfort” to describe the support their family contribute to their wellbeing in ICU. Our ICU trialled a carefully planned and rigorously evaluated flexible visiting arrangement that moved from 9 hrs per day to 21 hrs per day when family could be with their critically ill relative in ICU.
Flexible Visiting Hours in Intensive Care
Summary
Aim
Assess the impact of flexible visiting from the perspective of patients, families, and Intensive Care Unit (ICU) staff.
Benefits
Engages with patients and family members in a way that is meaningful to them.
Background
It is widely understood that patients want, and families need, to be with their critically ill relatives whenever they can. In spite of this, we limit when they can visit. To effectively achieve improved consumer engagement it was important to understand and evaluate this initiated from key stakeholders’ perspectives for its relevance and sustainability. A before-after mixed method study was used with interviews, focus groups and surveys. Patients were interviewed, family members completed the Family Satisfaction in ICU survey and ICU staff completed a survey and participated in focus groups following the introduction of 21 hours per day visiting at Princess Alexandra Hospital (PAH) ICU. The study was conducted within a philosophy of family-centred care.