Grief symptoms in relatives who experienced organ donation request in the ICU

Article indépendant

KENTISH-BARNES, Nancy | CHEVRET, Sylvie | CHEISSON, Gaëlle | JOSEPH, Liliane | MARTIN-LEFEVRE, Laurent | SI LARBI, Anne Gaelle | VIQUESNEL, Gérald | MARQUE, Sophie | DONATI, Stéphane | CHARPENTIER, Julien | PICHON, Nicolas | ZUBER, Benjamin | LESIEUR, Olivier | OUENDO, Martial | RENAULT, Anne | LE MAGUET, Pascale | KANDELMAN, Stanislas | THUONG, Marie | FLOCCARD, Bernard | MEZHER, Chaouki | GALON, Marion | DURANTEAU, Jacques | AZOULAY, Elie

RATIONALE: In the case of organ donation, the family is highly involved in the decision process. OBJECTIVE: To assess experience of organ donation process and grief symptoms in relatives of brain dead patients who discussed organ donation in the ICU. METHODS: Multicentre cross-sectional study in 28 ICUs in France. Participating subjects were relatives of brain dead patients who were approached to discuss organ donation. Relatives were followed-up by phone at 3 time points: at 1 month to complete a questionnaire describing their experience of organ donation process; At 3 months to complete the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and the Impact of Event Scale-Revised; At 9 months, to complete the IES-R and the Inventory of Complicated Grief. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: 202 relatives of 202 patients were included, of whom 158 consented and 44 refused organ donation. Interviews were conducted at 1, 3 and 9 months for 157, 137 and 117 relatives respectively. Experience was significantly more burdensome for relatives of non-donors. However there were no significant differences in grief symptoms measured at 3 and 9 months between the 2 groups. Understanding of brain death was associated with grief symptoms with higher prevalence of complicated grief symptoms in relatives who did not understand (75% vs 46.1%, p=0.026). CONCLUSION: Experience of the organ donation process varies between relatives of donor vs non-donor patients with relatives of non-donors experiencing lower quality communication, but the decision was not associated with subsequent grief symptoms. Importantly, understanding of brain death is a key element for relatives.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1164/rccm.201709-1899OC

Voir la revue «American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine»

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