Experiences of Patients With COVID-19 Admitted to the Intensive Care Units: A Qualitative Study
View/ Open
Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessDate
2021Author
Norouzadeh, RezaAbbasinia, Mohammad
Tayebi, Zahra
Sharifipour, Ehsan
Koohpaei, Alireza
Aghaie, Bahman
Asgarpour, Hossein
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Norouzadeh, R., Abbasinia, M., Tayebi, Z., Sharifipour, E., Koohpaei, A., Aghaie, B., & Asgarpour, H. (2021). Experiences of patients with COVID-19 admitted to the intensive care units: A qualitative study. Journal of Patient Experience, 8 doi:10.1177/23743735211007359Abstract
This study aimed to describe the experiences of patients with COVID-19 admitted to the intensive care units (ICU). The data were analyzed by content analysis on 16 ICU patients with COVID-19. Data were collected by semi-structured interviews. Three categories were identified: (a) captured by a challenging incident with subcategories: perceived sudden and challenging death, fear of carelessness in overcrowding, worry about the family, and frustration with stigmatizing; (b) the flourishing of life with subcategories: spiritual-awakening, resilience in the face of life challenges, promoting health behaviors, and striving for recovery; and (c) honoring the blessings with subcategories: understanding the importance of nurses, realizing the value of family, and realizing the value of altruism. COVID-19 survivors experienced both positive and negative experiences. The results of this study could help health care providers identify the needs of ICU patients with COVID-19, including psychological, social, and spiritual support and design care models.
Volume
8Issue
-URI
https://doi.org/10.1177/237437352110073592374-3743 / 2374-3735
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12428/3780