# Effects of Outdoor Therapy on Delirium in Patients With Prolonged Intensive Care Unit Stays: A Single‐Centre Retrospective Study

**Authors:** Daichi Tsukakoshi, Hitoshi Mutai, Shuhei Yamamoto, Masaaki Sato, Keisuke Furuhashi, Toshinori Nakamura, Takashi Ichiyama, Hiroshi Imamura, Hiroshi Horiuchi

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/nicc.70263 · 2025-11-19

## TL;DR

This study found that supervised outdoor therapy may reduce delirium severity in ICU patients with long hospital stays.

## Contribution

The study provides evidence that outdoor therapy is associated with reduced delirium severity in critically ill adults with prolonged ICU stays.

## Key findings

- Supervised outdoor therapy was linked to a significant decrease in delirium scores on the day of the first session.
- Patients who received outdoor therapy had lower delirium scores at ICU discharge compared to those who did not.
- More outdoor therapy sessions were associated with lower delirium scores at discharge after adjusting for covariates.

## Abstract

Delirium commonly occurs during prolonged intensive care unit (ICU) stays, yet the clinical benefit of escorted outdoor exposure for critically ill adults remains uncertain.

The aim of this study was to determine whether supervised outdoor therapy is associated with reduced delirium severity among adults with ICU stays ≥ 7 days.

We performed a single‐centre, retrospective cohort study in Japan, including adults with an ICU length of stay ≥ 7 days from 1 January 2019 to 31 December 2022. Delirium was assessed twice‐daily using the Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist (ICDSC). We evaluated (1) within‐patient change from 16:00 on the day before to 16:00 on the day of the first outdoor‐therapy session; (2) ICDSC score at ICU discharge comparing patients who did vs. did not receive outdoor therapy using multiple imputation integrated with propensity‐score matching; and (3) dose–response using multivariable linear regression with session count, adjusting for prespecified covariates including the highest ICDSC score and psychotropics prescribed through the first session.

Among patients (n = 391) receiving outdoor therapy, the median ICDSC score decreased from 4 to 2 on the day of the first session (p < 0.001). After propensity‐score matching, the outdoor‐therapy group had lower ICDSC scores at ICU discharge than matched controls (median: 3.0 [IQR 1.0–5.0] vs. 4.0 [2.0–6.0]; p = 0.013; Cliff's δ = −0.329). In the adjusted regression, a greater number of outdoor sessions was associated with a lower discharge ICDSC score (standardised β = −0.113; p = 0.025).

Supervised outdoor therapy was associated with lower delirium severity in adults with prolonged ICU stays. These findings support the integration of outdoor exposure within multimodal delirium management while prospective multicentre studies define standardised protocols and optimal dosing.

Incorporating brief, supervised outdoor sessions into multidisciplinary ICU workflows may provide a practical, non‐pharmacological adjunct for delirium care, pending confirmation in protocolised prospective trials.

Trial Registration: University Hospital Medical Information Network Clinical Trial Registry (UMIN‐CTR) (ID: UMIN000049057; registered on 1 October 2022; https://center6.umin.ac.jp/cgi‐open‐bin/ctr_e/ctr_view.cgi?recptno=R000055872)

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** delirium (MONDO:0045057)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** critically ill (MESH:D016638), Delirium (MESH:D003693)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12628662/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12628662