Introduction: Previous studies have shown that a light sedation level is beneficial for intubated patients in the Intensive care unit (ICU). Aim: This study aimed to describe intensive care nurses’ experiences of caring for intubated patients under light sedation. Methods: This study was an explorative descriptive qualitative study. Data were collected from 12 intensive care nurses by three focus group interviews and analyzed using qualitative content analysis. Findings: Five categories emerged from the data: 1) the importance of verbal communication and the nurses’ presence, 2) feelings of frustration and heavy workload, 3) assessment of patients’ pain and anxiety, 4) the nurses’ desire for the development of guidelines, and 5) being inspired by the care. Conclusion: The study found that intensive care nurses were positive towards light sedation care but the organization of care did not support them as the patients cared for with light sedation treatments demanded their physical presence at patients’ bed site.
Sedation of patients means relieving the patients’ symptoms and lowering their level of consciousness. The purpose of sedation of critically ill patients is to relieve their pain and discomfort, to reduce anxiety, and to increase patient tolerance for nursing and support of the organ system [
Previous research into light levels of sedation has investigated the following: the effects of light sedation [
Research concerning intensive care nurses’ experience of caring for lightly sedated intubated patients is scarce and greatly needed for person-centered healthcare. This is to develop an appropriate individual sedation level [
The aim of this study was to describe intensive care nurses’ experiences of caring for lightly sedated intubated patients.
An exploratory-descriptive qualitative approach was used in order to obtain a better understanding of the studied field [
The study was conducted with participants from an ICU in a county council hospital during January and February 2016. The unit had 12 beds. Three of the beds were for isolated patients and one bed was reserved for children. In addition, this county council hospital intensive care unit offered advanced respiratory support (mechanical ventilation), cardiovascular and renal support and a respiratory care for prematurely born children. The unit had 17 anesthetists, 43 intensive care nurses and 25 assistant nurses. Nurses worked eight- and eleven-hour rotating shifts and there was a nurse: patient ratio of either 1:1 or 1:2, dependent upon the patients’ condition.
The study was conducted using purposive sampling to ensure a range of informants of different ages, sex and working experience. The inclusion criteria for the study were that the informants should be registered nurses with specialist training in intensive care and experience in caring for lightly sedated intubated patients.
The deputy head of the intensive care department was contacted to obtain approval to conduct the study at the hospital and to invite people to participate. In consultation with the deputy head of department, three different times were set for the interviews, depending on the times that staff interested in participating could leave their workplace. The participants who were available at these interview times received oral and written information about the inclusion criteria and the purpose and ethical principles of the study, and were asked to participate.
The study population consisted of 12 registered nurses with specialized training in intensive care, including one man and 11 women, aged from 39 to 62 years (median 47 years), with experience of working in intensive care ranging from seven to 30 years (median 19 years).
Data were collected by three focus group interviews. A semi-structured interview guide was used in order to explore a variety of different experiences concerning the research topic from the standpoint of the informants themselves on a predefined set of issues [
A pilot test for the interview guide was carried out by three intensive care nurses who were not participating in the study. This pilot test led to minor corrections of language.
The focus group interviews were held in a secluded room outside the participants’ workplace. Each focus group lasted about 30 minutes and included four persons. Three focus groups consisted of female participants, and one consisted of a man and three women. The moderator (KP, sometimes KB) guided the discussion and the assistant moderator (KB, sometimes KP) was present to operate an audio recorder and to take comprehensive notes. During the interviews, interaction between the participants was lively, with discussion and an exchange of experience and knowledge.
All the interviews were recorded and transcribed by the authors, KB and KP.
Qualitative inductive content analysis was used to analyze data in order to identify patterns, variations and similarities [
During the analysis, the transcribed data were read repeatedly to obtain an overall picture. The authors reflected on the main content of the text and developed meaning units. Following this, they searched for similarities and patterns in order to develop categories from the perspective of the meaning units [
In order to achieve trustworthiness in this study, the following steps were taken: 1) in order to ensure credibility, analysis and then the formulation of codes, subcategories and categories was carried out by the first two authors (KB and KP) and then they were reviewed and assessed for relevance by the third author (EH), who was experienced in qualitative studies and healthcare issues; 2) in order to ensure dependability, during the analysis process, accuracy, proximity and distance were followed by reading and re-reading of the material during all the analytical steps to check that each step was being followed; and 3)in order to ensure confirmability, it was ensured that the path from the meaning unit through condensation and coding to the subcategories and categories could be followed in the text [
This study was conducted in accordance with the ethical principles of medical research involving human subjects established in Swedish law [
Five categories: 1) the importance of verbal communication and the nurses’ presence, 2) feelings of frustration and heavy workload, 3) assessment of patients’ pain and anxiety, 4) the nurses’ desire for the development of guidelines, and 5) being inspired by the care revealed the intensive care nurses’ experience of the care of intubated patients under light levels of sedation.
The importance of verbal communication with the lightly sedated patient was a subject that was returned to frequently during the interviews. The nurses were aware that good verbal communication required that the information given should be understandable for the patient in order to involve them in their healthcare concerning nursing decisions and/or treatments. Therefore, the intensive care nurses felt that contact through verbal communication was important.
The intensive care nurses wished to involve the patients actively in their care. They felt a responsibility for ensuring that the patients understood the nursing interventions that they were performing. The willingness to help the patient through communication was strongly felt among all informants, and they were positive about spending extra time and resources to ensure mutual understanding between themselves and their patients. They were aware of the importance of good communication between nurse and patient, and their experience was that mutual understanding between them led to a good care relationship.
“It’s important to get that contact with the patient so that the patient agrees with what we do. One who is very deeply sedated, maybe we say, now we will turn you around, and then we’ll do that as well. But if you have a patient who can work against us or with us, it’s better to get them to work with you, even though that takes more time” (Participant 3, group 2).
Communicating and trying to establish a relationship with the lightly sedated patient was experienced as more demanding, however. All the informants agreed that it was not always self-evident what the patient meant when he/she tried to communicate. Reading the patient’s lips was not always easy and finding a way to understand each other required patience. However, there was a desire among the informants to have a good care relationship with the patient, despite the fact that this required more time and resources. Being able to communicate with the patient also helped the nurses to better understand the patients’ healthcare situations.
The informants described caring for a lightly sedated intubated patient as a challenge. The challenge was how to fulfill the patient’s need for the nurse’s permanent presence. They stated that when their workload increased, and they were forced to attend to two patients at the same time, it was difficult when their both of patients needed help and at the same time, the lightly sedated patient constantly required their presence.
“…you can’t let go of that patient to concentrate on another patient, you need to be present frequently…” (Participant 4, group 3).
All informants, during all three interviews, mentioned feelings and experiences of frustration. Although for the most part, the experience of caring for the lightly sedated patient was positive and inspiring among the informants, on the other hand they felt helplessness and frustration when they could not help the patient with pain relief and/or relieve suffering. Feelings of helplessness and frustration also appeared when different strategies in the patient’s treatment were tried but nothing worked. The intensive care nurses felt responsible for the patient’s feelings. They felt that it was important to provide good-quality care that included knowledge about the importance of finding a good balance between light sedation, pain relief and anxiety.
“It is a frustration within you when you’re not able to help them, when you can’t do anything to make them better. You try, but you may still not get there during your shift” (Participant 3, group 3).
The informants stated that it was impossible for every patient to have a light level of sedation. Nurses even described being emotionally affected when they saw that a patient had suffered because their duty was to understand the patient’s view on his or her illness.
Despite a good knowledge of light sedation and what kind of care these patients needed, the intensive care nurses were sometimes forced to decline this kind of care when the workload was too great. Informants mentioned that in some situations their workload was heavy, which led to them being forced to refrain from the goal of keeping the patient under a light level of sedation. They felt frustration when they had the will and aim of trying to keep the patients in good condition under light sedation but staff levels and heavy workload affected the level of sedation.
“If we have many patients in bad condition, you will not be able to have them (patients with light sedation) under light sedation and awake as you wish; that’s the truth, actually” (Participant 2, group 3).
Every day, the intensive care nurses helped to relieve the patients’ pain and anxiety, and the informants had a wide set of skills in this area. Yet, they had differing opinions about the assessment of pain and anxiety, with some of them feeling that it was easy to assess the level of the patients’ pain and anxiety, whereas others found it difficult.
“If a patient has pain, I notice that very well” (Participant 2, group 2).
“No, I think it’s a bit difficult... I think the signs of the patient can be a bit difficult to read, if there is anxiety or pain...” (Participant 1, group 2).
The informants described different ways of trying to understand and assess anxiety and pain. Checking parameters such as blood pressure, respiratory rate and pulse was one method used, and anxiety and the patients’ facial expressions affected the assessment.
It is understandable that it was not always easy to assess anxiety and pain. Interpreting parameters such as blood pressure and pulse along with facial expressions sometimes led to confusion in their assessments, although experience in healthcare and in having cared for many different patients who expressed pain and anxiety in different ways helped the intensive care nurses to identify the pain and/or the anxiety. However, the informants were well aware that they could not discern the pain and anxiety of all patients.
“We think we see it (pain and/or anxiety), but there may be those who look calm and still feel it (pain and/or anxiety). But otherwise you think you see the signs (of pain and/or anxiety) fast, you can see that this is not working… They’re not feeling good” (Participant 2, group 3).
Intensive care nurses must always have the patients’ current medical issues in mind in order to assess their pain and anxiety. If the patient had severe sepsis, with abnormal parameters of blood pressure, pulse and respiratory rate, it would be necessary for the nurse not to rely only on these parameters when making the assessment. The medical background of the patient could also be of value in the investigation if the patient experienced any pain or anxiety. Therefore, the patients’ medical background was an important instrument for the intensive care nurses when they assessed pain and anxiety.
The care of lightly sedated intubated patients required collaboration between all the professions in an intensive care unit. Sometimes when it was difficult to manage the patients’ pain and anxiety, the informants felt that there was a lack of guidelines relating to how they should proceed in the care of the patient. There was also a need for guidelines when a lightly sedated intubated patient was not doing well; for example, when the patient was not responding to pain treatment, and when it was time to try a new kind of medication because the patient’s anxiety had not been alleviated with the first medication. The nurses felt that it was difficult for them to decide how to proceed in the further treatment of the patient.
“…if we had some regime we could use, like we start with this and if that doesn’t work we continue with this medication instead; you want it to be like that, but unfortunately it isn’t…” (Participant 3, group 3).
Informants felt inspired to care for lightly sedated patients, even though it demanded more of the intensive care nurses in terms of time and resources. They felt satisfaction when they received a response from an intubated patient. Furthermore, they felt it was stimulating to be able to establish a relationship with the patient, to get a response from the patient and to see the person behind the sickness. The ability to establish contact with the patient created job satisfaction and was most valuable for them.
The intensive care nurses felt satisfaction and pleasure when an intubated patient tolerated a light level of sedation and could communicate their healthcare situation and “life world”, because the positive effects of light sedation in intubated patients were well known by the informants.
“…sometimes it is so easy, the patient just lies there pointing while awake, completely calm; when it is like that it isn’t any problem…” (Participant 1, group 3).
In summary, the principle finding of the study was that intensive care nurses have a positive attitude towards light sedation care but the organization of care does not support them as the patients cared for with light sedation treatments demanded their physical presence at patients’ bed site. Caring for these patients gave stimulus to their work, and positive responses from the patients contributed to their job satisfaction. On the other hand, it also required more involvement by the nurses because the patients had a greater need of their presence, both mentally and physically. Thus, the study found that the intensive care nurses had a positive attitude toward caring for these patients.
The strength of this research is that the focus group interviews allowed participants to express their views, which increased their comfort level and stimulated them to react to what was said by others, thereby leading to deeper expressions of their experiences, and also maximizing the quality of data [
One limitation could be that the recruitment of participants took place through contact with the deputy head of department, which could have affected the informants’ willingness to participate in the study based on the hierarchic perspective above and beyond the workplace [
The findings from this study are contextual and can contribute to improved knowledge of the studied topic. They can also be transferred to other ICU with similar characteristics, as several intensive care nurses described similar practices [
Our study found that patients’ ability to communicate verbally helped the intensive care nurses to understand and embrace the patients’ healthcare situations and to build a caring relationship between the parties. It also gave a stimulus to the work being performed, and the responses from the patients contributed to the nurses’ job satisfaction. A previous study [
This study’s findings showed that more attendance, dedication and time were required to care for an intubated patient under light sedation. Being close to the patient and explaining what will happen to them are the most important tasks for the intensive care nurse [
The results from this study showed that when caring for intubated patients under light sedation, it was difficult to assess the patient’s pain and anxiety. Furthermore, objective parameters such as blood pressure and heart rate, and subjective signs such as the patients’ body language and the nurses’ personal experience were used to determine whether patients were bothered by pain or anxiety. The patients were mostly limited in their ability to communicate verbally, which meant that they communicated more with body language [
The present study found that the care of lightly sedated intubated patients was experienced as requiring more involvement in the form of the mental and physical presence of the intensive care nurses. Despite this, the nurses perceived that it was also inspiring to care for these patients, in agreement with previous studies [
The study revealed positive experiences of the care of intubated patients under light sedation. The patients’ ability to communicate verbally facilitated the care being performed and the response from the patients contributed to the nurses’ job satisfaction. However, the study found that there were also negative experiences related to the care of such patients, as it required more involvement from the intensive care nurses because the patients had a greater need for the presence of the nurses, both mentally and physically.
This study highlights the importance of raising awareness of how intensive care nurses experience the care of lightly sedated intubated patients, in order to provide an understanding of what this kind of care requires from the resources of the intensive care nurse. Increased understanding of the subject may be useful to the healthcare service in order to improve the policy frameworks that are needed to perform this care, which in turn would increase nurse job satisfaction and patient-centered nursing.
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
KB, KP and EH were responsible for the study conception and design and development of the interview guide. KB and KP carried out the data collection and performed qualitative analyses. EH helped in qualitative analyses. KB, KP and EH drafted, revised and performed the drafting of the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
The authors are grateful to Anchor, English correction and proofreading service, for linguistic service of the manuscript.
Bäcklund, K., Persson, K. and Hadziabdic, E. (2018) Intensive Care Nurses’ Experiences of Caring for Intubated Patients under Light Sedation: A Qualitative Study. Open Journal of Nursing, 8, 473-484. https://doi.org/10.4236/ojn.2018.87036