TY - JOUR
T1 - Patient perspectives on stress after ICU and a short primary care based psychological intervention – results from a qualitative sub‑study of the PICTURE trial
AU - for the PICTURE study group
AU - Beutel, Antina
AU - Sanftenberg, Linda
AU - Friemel, Chris M.
AU - Kosilek, Robert Philipp
AU - Schauer, Maggie
AU - Elbert, Thomas
AU - Reips, Ulf Dietrich
AU - Schubert, Tomke
AU - Gehrke-Beck, Sabine
AU - Schmidt, Konrad
AU - Gensichen, Jochen
AU - Zwissler, Bernhard
AU - Christian, Zöllner
AU - Well, Harald
AU - Weiss, Georg
AU - Weis, Marion
AU - Weierstall-Pust, Roland
AU - Weiss, Björn
AU - Wehrstedt, Regina
AU - Wäscher, Cornelia
AU - Wassilowsky, Dietmar
AU - Walther, Andreas
AU - Voigt, Karen
AU - Vogl, Thomas
AU - Thurm, Franka
AU - Theisen, Kerstin
AU - Spieth, Peter
AU - Singhammer, John
AU - Schumacher, Karin
AU - Schulze, Thomas G.
AU - Schultz, Susanne
AU - Schnurr, Julia
AU - Schneider, Jürgen
AU - Schneider, Gerhard
AU - Schneider, Antonius
AU - Scherer, Martin
AU - Scherag, André
AU - Schelling, Jörg
AU - Schelling, Gustav
AU - Rüchhardt, Ann
AU - Ringeis, Grit
AU - Riessen, Reimer
AU - Richter, Hans Peter
AU - Reill, Lorenz
AU - Rank, Nikolaus
AU - Ragaller, Maximilian
AU - Papiol, Sergi
AU - Linde, Klaus
AU - Laugwitz, Karl Ludwig
AU - Friederich, Patrick
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/12
Y1 - 2025/12
N2 - Background: Approximately 20–25% of patients who survive medical treatment at an intensive care unit (ICU) develop post-traumatic stress symptoms. There is currently a gap in follow-up care for them. As part of the PICTURE study, general practitioners (GPs) carried out a brief interview-based intervention. The aim of this sub-study is to record the most distressing memories of ICU treatment from the patient’s perspective and their evaluation of a GP-based brief psychological intervention. Methods: Participants were recruited from the intervention group of the main PICTURE study using selective sampling. All of them had experienced an ICU stay with mechanical ventilation and severe organ failure in the previous two years. They were interviewed about their experience of psychological stress during their ICU stay and their retrospective evaluation of the intervention. Semi-structured, guideline-based telephone interviews were conducted for this purpose, processed, and analyzed using the structuring qualitative content analysis based on Mayring. Findings: When asked N = 8 patients about the most stressful memory of their stay at ICU, the main themes were helplessness, pain, fixation, inability to communicate and sleep disturbances. The question of amnesia regarding the stay in the ICU was answered affirmatively by half of the interviewees but was not experienced as stressful. The brief trauma-focused intervention carried out by their GPs was well received by all respondents. Conclusions: The interviewees confirm that aversive traumatizing experiences are often associated with intensive care treatment and reinforce each other. These are due to the treatment setting but should be reduced wherever possible. In view of chronification and the lack of specific follow-up treatment options for these patients and the long waiting times for psychotherapy, the implementation of low-threshold treatment options by GPs appears to be ideally suited to closing this gap in care, particularly for patients with mild to moderate symptoms of a post-traumatic stress disorder. Trial registration: The main trial was registered at ClinTrials gov (NCT03315390) and at the German Register of Clinical Trials (DRKS, DRKS00012589) on 17/10/2017.
AB - Background: Approximately 20–25% of patients who survive medical treatment at an intensive care unit (ICU) develop post-traumatic stress symptoms. There is currently a gap in follow-up care for them. As part of the PICTURE study, general practitioners (GPs) carried out a brief interview-based intervention. The aim of this sub-study is to record the most distressing memories of ICU treatment from the patient’s perspective and their evaluation of a GP-based brief psychological intervention. Methods: Participants were recruited from the intervention group of the main PICTURE study using selective sampling. All of them had experienced an ICU stay with mechanical ventilation and severe organ failure in the previous two years. They were interviewed about their experience of psychological stress during their ICU stay and their retrospective evaluation of the intervention. Semi-structured, guideline-based telephone interviews were conducted for this purpose, processed, and analyzed using the structuring qualitative content analysis based on Mayring. Findings: When asked N = 8 patients about the most stressful memory of their stay at ICU, the main themes were helplessness, pain, fixation, inability to communicate and sleep disturbances. The question of amnesia regarding the stay in the ICU was answered affirmatively by half of the interviewees but was not experienced as stressful. The brief trauma-focused intervention carried out by their GPs was well received by all respondents. Conclusions: The interviewees confirm that aversive traumatizing experiences are often associated with intensive care treatment and reinforce each other. These are due to the treatment setting but should be reduced wherever possible. In view of chronification and the lack of specific follow-up treatment options for these patients and the long waiting times for psychotherapy, the implementation of low-threshold treatment options by GPs appears to be ideally suited to closing this gap in care, particularly for patients with mild to moderate symptoms of a post-traumatic stress disorder. Trial registration: The main trial was registered at ClinTrials gov (NCT03315390) and at the German Register of Clinical Trials (DRKS, DRKS00012589) on 17/10/2017.
KW - Mental health
KW - Narrative Exposure Therapy
KW - PICS
KW - Post-intensive care syndrome
KW - Post-traumatic stress disorder
KW - Qualitative analysis
KW - Stressful memories
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85216016077&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s12875-024-02698-6
DO - 10.1186/s12875-024-02698-6
M3 - Article
C2 - 39815198
AN - SCOPUS:85216016077
SN - 2731-4553
VL - 26
JO - BMC primary care
JF - BMC primary care
IS - 1
M1 - 12
ER -