Quality of Life in Critically Ill Patients: A Systematic Review

Mohammed Alkubeysi

Department of Psychiatry Cedars-Sinai 8730 Alden Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90048, Affiliation: Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Hospital in Los Angeles, California, USA

Jigar Kadakia

Department of Psychiatry Cedars-Sinai 8730 Alden Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90048, Affiliation: Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Hospital in Los Angeles, California, USA

George Dous

Department of Psychiatry Cedars-Sinai 8730 Alden Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90048, Affiliation: Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Hospital in Los Angeles, California, USA

David James

Department of Psychiatry Cedars-Sinai 8730 Alden Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90048, Affiliation: Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Hospital in Los Angeles, California, USA

Andre Besada

Department of Psychiatry Cedars-Sinai 8730 Alden Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90048, Affiliation: Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Hospital in Los Angeles, California, USA

Kirti Malhotra

Department of Psychiatry Cedars-Sinai 8730 Alden Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90048, Affiliation: Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Hospital in Los Angeles, California, USA

Steven Clevenger

Department of Psychiatry Cedars-Sinai 8730 Alden Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90048, Affiliation: Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Hospital in Los Angeles, California, USA

Waguih William IsHak *

Department of Psychiatry Cedars-Sinai 8730 Alden Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90048, Affiliation: Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Hospital in Los Angeles, California, USA

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Objective: This paper aims to present a comprehensive literature review of Quality of Life (QOL) in patients who are suffering from serious medical illness as evidenced by receiving treatment in the intensive care setting. By examining the instruments used to measure QOL, as well as the factors that influence it, this review will explore the relevance of QOL to patient care and management.

Data Sources: From Medline and other online resources, over 467 articles were identified, of which 73 articles were selected for inclusion in this review by three independent reviewers. The reviewers reached a consensus using pre-defined selection criteria.

Study Selection Criteria: Articles had to: 1) be written in English or have an available published English translation, 2) be published in a peer-reviewed journal, 3) study adult humans, 4) focus on serious medical illnesses, such as sepsis and MI (myocardial infarction), rather than focusing exclusively on terminal illnesses (any study design was accepted), and 5) use at least one QOL measure.

Data Extraction: The study selection process yielded 73 articles. Research methodology and key findings were derived from the full text and tables of the selected studies.

Data Synthesis: QOL is very poor in gravely ill medical patients and continues to decline with further deterioration of medical status. A model that incorporates QOL and the severity of the medical illness, in addition to the patient’s wishes, might have the potential to improve overall QOL for patients and their families and guide end-of-life decisions.

Conclusions: A formal assessment of the patient's QOL and final wishes could assist the patient, their loved ones, and the treating physician in making critical decisions about how to improve QOL through comfort/palliative care.

Keywords: Quality of Life (QOL), Intensive Care Unit (ICU), seriously ill patients, well-being, Health Related Quality of Life (HRQOL), palliative care, terminal cases, Quality of Life instruments


How to Cite

Alkubeysi, Mohammed, Jigar Kadakia, George Dous, David James, Andre Besada, Kirti Malhotra, Steven Clevenger, and Waguih William IsHak. 2015. “Quality of Life in Critically Ill Patients: A Systematic Review”. Journal of Advances in Medicine and Medical Research 11 (7):1-17. https://doi.org/10.9734/BJMMR/2016/19621.

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