Connecting in Crisis: Enhancing Family Satisfaction in the Intensive Care Unit Through Effective Communication in an Indian Tertiary Care Hospital
Mehul Shah, Kishor Surenderan, Gauri Pathare, Shreyans Rai, Mayur Patel, Darshana Rathod, Rahul Pandit, Arindham Kar, Tushar Parmar, Hirak Patel

TL;DR
This study evaluates family satisfaction in an ICU at an Indian hospital and finds that communication improvements boost satisfaction, especially in decision-making.
Contribution
The study introduces quality improvement initiatives in an Indian ICU setting, showing measurable improvements in family satisfaction through communication training and multidisciplinary meetings.
Findings
Family satisfaction was high overall, with higher satisfaction in care than in decision-making domains.
Quality improvement initiatives significantly improved both care and decision-making satisfaction scores.
Families of non-ventilated patients reported better communication and consideration from ICU staff.
Abstract
Background Patient satisfaction is an important indicator of the quality of healthcare. However, in critically ill patients who are unable to actively participate in the decision-making process or provide feedback, the satisfaction of their family members is important. The modified Family Satisfaction in the Intensive Care Unit (FS-ICU-24R) questionnaire is a globally validated tool to measure the quality of care in the intensive care unit (ICU) from the perspective of the patient’s family. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the performance of our tertiary care center using this questionnaire and identify factors influencing family satisfaction in the ICU and areas requiring improvement to improve healthcare quality. Methodology This retrospective cohort study was conducted in the ICU of an Indian tertiary care hospital. Data were collected from the FS-ICU-24R surveys…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFamily and Patient Care in Intensive Care Units · Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues · Family Caregiving in Mental Illness
