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Published in: Neurocritical Care 3/2019

01-06-2019 | Original Article

Preventing Chronic Emotional Distress in Stroke Survivors and Their Informal Caregivers

Authors: Jessica L. McCurley, Christopher J. Funes, Emily L. Zale, Ann Lin, Michelle Jacobo, Jamie M. Jacobs, Danielle Salgueiro, Tara Tehan, Jonathan Rosand, Ana-Maria Vranceanu

Published in: Neurocritical Care | Issue 3/2019

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Abstract

Background/Objective

Chronic emotional distress (e.g., depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress) is common after stroke and interdependent between patients and their informal caregivers. We measured stroke survivors’, caregivers’, and neurocritical care nurses’ views of primary drivers of distress during the stroke experience, and needs and preferences for the structure, topics, mode of delivery, and timing of an intervention to promote emotional recovery.

Methods

We conducted semi-structured interviews with 24 patient–caregiver dyads within the Neuroscience Intensive Care Unit (Neuro-ICU). Additionally, we conducted two focus groups with 15 nurses. Interviews and focus groups were audio-recorded, transcribed, and coded using NVivo 11 (QSR International) software.

Results and Conclusions

The challenges and impacts of stroke most commonly reported by dyads were: uncertainty about future health, fear of recurrent strokes, negative emotions, and role changes post-stroke. Dyads and nurses agreed that resiliency skills such as mindfulness/focusing on the present, problem solving, gratitude/optimism, self-care, interpersonal communication and developing a supportive team of family, friends, and medical staff are beneficial to optimize recovery. The potential barrier to intervention delivery was accessibility, due to challenges of time and travel to appointments. Participants agreed that starting the intervention at hospitalization and continuing via live video after discharge is an ideal delivery modality. Stroke survivors, caregivers, and Neuro-ICU nurses believe that a resiliency skills-based intervention to prevent chronic emotional distress is necessary and urgent. This qualitative study provides valuable information on the challenges faced by dyads, intervention topics to prioritize, and strategies to maximize feasibility, acceptability, and effect.
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Metadata
Title
Preventing Chronic Emotional Distress in Stroke Survivors and Their Informal Caregivers
Authors
Jessica L. McCurley
Christopher J. Funes
Emily L. Zale
Ann Lin
Michelle Jacobo
Jamie M. Jacobs
Danielle Salgueiro
Tara Tehan
Jonathan Rosand
Ana-Maria Vranceanu
Publication date
01-06-2019
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Neurocritical Care / Issue 3/2019
Print ISSN: 1541-6933
Electronic ISSN: 1556-0961
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12028-018-0641-6

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