Fur-Hsing Wen, Paul A Boelen, Wen-Chi Chou, Tsung-Hui Hu, Chung-Chi Huang, Siew Tzuh Tang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Co-occurrence of prolonged grief disorder (PGD) with psychologic distress like posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression is widely studied. However, only two non-ICU studies from Western countries have cross-sectionally examined co-occurring PGD, PTSD, depression, and anxiety symptoms among individuals who experienced traumatic bereavement, yielding inconsistent findings. Despite this, PGD symptoms frequently co-occur with anxiety symptoms, which strongly predicts PTSD-depression trajectories and PGD-PTSD-depression symptom states. To identify and examine transitions through distinct states of co-occurring PGD, PTSD, depression, and anxiety symptoms over the first two bereavement years among Taiwanese ICU bereaved who lost a family member to diseases.
Design: Prospective cohort study.
Setting: MICUs of two Taiwanese medical centers.
Subjects: Three hundred three family members.
Interventions: None.
Measurements and main results: Participants were surveyed at 6, 13, 18, and 24 months of post-bereavement with 11 items from the PG-13, the Impact of Event Scale-Revised, and depression and anxiety subscales of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Latent transition analysis was used to examine the PGD-PTSD-depression-anxiety symptom states and their prevalence over time. At 6 months of post-bereavement, we identified four distinct PGD-PTSD-depression-anxiety symptom states (prevalence): resilient (62.7%), subthreshold PGD-depression (21.2%), PGD-dominant (11.2%), and co-occurring PGD-PTSD-depression-anxiety (4.9%). Symptom states were mostly stable over time; however, when participants transitioned between states, they typically moved toward lower distress states. At 24 months of post-bereavement, the prevalence rankings remained unchanged: resilient (81.1%), subthreshold PGD-depression (10.9%), PGD-dominant (5.5%), and co-occurring PGD-PTSD-depression-anxiety (2.5%).
Conclusions: We consistently observed four distinct PGD-PTSD-depression-anxiety-symptom states during the first two bereavement years of ICU family members. Persistently elevated PGD symptoms, alone or with PTSD, depression, and anxiety, can already be detected within 6 months of bereavement, underscoring the need for early screening to provide timely psychologic support or treatments for those at risk of chronic PGD or co-occurring symptom states.
期刊介绍:
Critical Care Medicine is the premier peer-reviewed, scientific publication in critical care medicine. Directed to those specialists who treat patients in the ICU and CCU, including chest physicians, surgeons, pediatricians, pharmacists/pharmacologists, anesthesiologists, critical care nurses, and other healthcare professionals, Critical Care Medicine covers all aspects of acute and emergency care for the critically ill or injured patient.
Each issue presents critical care practitioners with clinical breakthroughs that lead to better patient care, the latest news on promising research, and advances in equipment and techniques.