Bobawsky, KirstenSchalm, Emma2022-07-052022-07-052022-06Schalm, E. (2022). Understanding patient and family perspectives of accelerated discharge planning in the critically ill (Master's thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca.http://hdl.handle.net/1880/114800Accelerated discharge, which involves initiation of discharge planning earlier in patients’ intensive care unit (ICU) stay, has become more common to reduce discharge delays and mitigate capacity strain challenges experienced in Canadian ICUs. Successful accelerated discharge planning relies on effective clinician communication and partnering with patients and family caregivers, who are the only constant throughout the care journey. To best enable family caregivers to feel self-efficacious in collaborating in the care of their critically ill loved one, their perspectives on the practice of accelerated discharge planning are needed to help facilitate successful transitions in care. The work presented in this thesis sought to understand patient and family perspectives on accelerated discharge planning as with their insights on supportive elements in accelerated discharge plans. We conducted 45-minute virtual semi-structured interviews with former critically ill patients and family caregivers of former critically ill patients between October 2021 and January 2022. We used inductive, reflexive thematic analysis to identify relevant themes and subthemes. Key themes identified following thematic analysis from seven participants (n=2 former critically ill patients, n=5 family caregivers) included: discharge planning process and stakeholder goal alignment (i.e., benefits of earlier planning, communication and continuity of care, and desire for stakeholder collaboration in care), patient and family support needs in accelerated discharge planning (i.e., informational support, psychological support, and logistical support), scope of support across care settings (i.e., form and timing of supports), individuality of dyads (i.e., condition, capacity, and environmental characteristics specific to each dyad), facilitators and barriers to accelerated discharge planning at the individual and structural level. The work presented in this thesis suggest that patients and families are receptive to accelerated discharge planning because accelerated discharge planning may provide opportunities for patients and family that are not present in current models of discharge; that is, there is alignment of objectives between this transition in care model and patient and family goals of care. Individualized, realistic accelerated discharge plans that provide informational, psychological, and logistical supports may help facilitate successful transitions in care.engUniversity of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission.EpidemiologyUnderstanding Patient and Family Perspectives of Accelerated Discharge Planning in the Critically Illmaster thesis10.11575/PRISM/39870