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“RéaNet”, the Internet utilization among surrogates of critically ill patients with sepsis

CONTEXT: Health-related Internet utilization is common but its use by proxies of critically ill patients is unknown. Our objective was to describe the prevalence and the Internet utilization characteristics among surrogates of critically ill septic patients. We conducted a prospective observational...

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Autores principales: Nguyen, Yên-Lan, Porcher, Raphaël, Argaud, Laurent, Piquilloud, Lise, Guitton, Christophe, Tamion, Fabienne, Hraiech, Sami, Mira, Jean-Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5373530/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28358883
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0174292
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author Nguyen, Yên-Lan
Porcher, Raphaël
Argaud, Laurent
Piquilloud, Lise
Guitton, Christophe
Tamion, Fabienne
Hraiech, Sami
Mira, Jean-Paul
author_facet Nguyen, Yên-Lan
Porcher, Raphaël
Argaud, Laurent
Piquilloud, Lise
Guitton, Christophe
Tamion, Fabienne
Hraiech, Sami
Mira, Jean-Paul
author_sort Nguyen, Yên-Lan
collection PubMed
description CONTEXT: Health-related Internet utilization is common but its use by proxies of critically ill patients is unknown. Our objective was to describe the prevalence and the Internet utilization characteristics among surrogates of critically ill septic patients. We conducted a prospective observational study in French ICUs. Three survey instruments were used to describe ICU organization regarding information delivery, patients and surrogates characteristics. RESULTS: 169 surrogates of 146 septic patients hospitalized in 19 ICUs were included. One sixth of ICUs (n = 3, 16%) had their own website. Majority of patients were males (n = 100, 68%), aged 64±1 years old, with a SAPS2 score at 53±17 and required vasopressors (n = 117, 83%), mechanical ventilation (n = 116, 82%). More than one quarter required renal replacement therapy (n = 36, 26%). Majority of surrogates were female, in their fifties. Only one in five knew the word sepsis (n = 27, 16%). Majority of proxies internet users (n = 77; 55%) search on the internet about sepsis. The main motivation was curiosity. Majority of surrogates found the information online reliable, suitable for request and concordant. Prior use of health-related Internet (OR = 20.7 [4.30–100.1]), the presence of a nursing staff during family-physician meetings (OR = 3.33 [1.17–9.53]), a younger patient age (OR = 1.32 [1.01–1.72]) and renal replacement therapy requirement (OR = 2.58 [1.06–6.26]) were associated with health-related Internet use. Neither satisfaction with medical care or information provision, neither presence of anxiety-depression symptoms, were associated with health-related Internet use. Majority of surrogates (N = 76 (52%)) would have like receiving a list of selected websites on sepsis. CONCLUSIONS: Majority of proxies of critically ill patients with sepsis use Internet to learn more about sepsis. Internet utilization is independent of satisfaction with global ICU care, perceived quality of information delivery by doctors or the existence of anxiety-depression symptoms during ICU stay. The delivery of a list of recommended web sites on sepsis would have been appreciated.
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spelling pubmed-53735302017-04-07 “RéaNet”, the Internet utilization among surrogates of critically ill patients with sepsis Nguyen, Yên-Lan Porcher, Raphaël Argaud, Laurent Piquilloud, Lise Guitton, Christophe Tamion, Fabienne Hraiech, Sami Mira, Jean-Paul PLoS One Research Article CONTEXT: Health-related Internet utilization is common but its use by proxies of critically ill patients is unknown. Our objective was to describe the prevalence and the Internet utilization characteristics among surrogates of critically ill septic patients. We conducted a prospective observational study in French ICUs. Three survey instruments were used to describe ICU organization regarding information delivery, patients and surrogates characteristics. RESULTS: 169 surrogates of 146 septic patients hospitalized in 19 ICUs were included. One sixth of ICUs (n = 3, 16%) had their own website. Majority of patients were males (n = 100, 68%), aged 64±1 years old, with a SAPS2 score at 53±17 and required vasopressors (n = 117, 83%), mechanical ventilation (n = 116, 82%). More than one quarter required renal replacement therapy (n = 36, 26%). Majority of surrogates were female, in their fifties. Only one in five knew the word sepsis (n = 27, 16%). Majority of proxies internet users (n = 77; 55%) search on the internet about sepsis. The main motivation was curiosity. Majority of surrogates found the information online reliable, suitable for request and concordant. Prior use of health-related Internet (OR = 20.7 [4.30–100.1]), the presence of a nursing staff during family-physician meetings (OR = 3.33 [1.17–9.53]), a younger patient age (OR = 1.32 [1.01–1.72]) and renal replacement therapy requirement (OR = 2.58 [1.06–6.26]) were associated with health-related Internet use. Neither satisfaction with medical care or information provision, neither presence of anxiety-depression symptoms, were associated with health-related Internet use. Majority of surrogates (N = 76 (52%)) would have like receiving a list of selected websites on sepsis. CONCLUSIONS: Majority of proxies of critically ill patients with sepsis use Internet to learn more about sepsis. Internet utilization is independent of satisfaction with global ICU care, perceived quality of information delivery by doctors or the existence of anxiety-depression symptoms during ICU stay. The delivery of a list of recommended web sites on sepsis would have been appreciated. Public Library of Science 2017-03-30 /pmc/articles/PMC5373530/ /pubmed/28358883 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0174292 Text en © 2017 Nguyen et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nguyen, Yên-Lan
Porcher, Raphaël
Argaud, Laurent
Piquilloud, Lise
Guitton, Christophe
Tamion, Fabienne
Hraiech, Sami
Mira, Jean-Paul
“RéaNet”, the Internet utilization among surrogates of critically ill patients with sepsis
title “RéaNet”, the Internet utilization among surrogates of critically ill patients with sepsis
title_full “RéaNet”, the Internet utilization among surrogates of critically ill patients with sepsis
title_fullStr “RéaNet”, the Internet utilization among surrogates of critically ill patients with sepsis
title_full_unstemmed “RéaNet”, the Internet utilization among surrogates of critically ill patients with sepsis
title_short “RéaNet”, the Internet utilization among surrogates of critically ill patients with sepsis
title_sort “réanet”, the internet utilization among surrogates of critically ill patients with sepsis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5373530/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28358883
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0174292
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