Exploring the Impact of Storytelling for Hospitalized Patients Recovering from COVID-19.
Lara GurneyVincci ChungMaura MacpheeEvelyn ChanClaire SnymanJaclyn RobinsonSerena Bertoli-HaleyElizabeth BaronPublished in: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
There are mental and physical deficits associated with COVID-19 infection, particularly among individuals requiring hospitalization. Storytelling is a relational intervention that has been used to help patients make sense of their illness experiences and to share their experiences with others, including other patients, families and healthcare providers. Relational interventions strive to create positive, healing stories versus negative ones. In one urban acute care hospital, an initiative called the Patient Stories Project (PSP) uses storytelling as a relational intervention to promote patient healing, including the development of healthier relationships among themselves, with families and with healthcare providers. This qualitative study employed a series of interview questions that were collaboratively developed with patient partners and COVID-19 survivors. The questions asked consenting COVID-19 survivors about why they chose to tell their stories and to flesh out more about their recovery process. Thematic analyses of six participant interviews resulted in the identification of key themes along a COVID-19 recovery pathway. Patients' stories revealed how survivors progress from being overwhelmed by their symptoms to making sense of what is happening to them, providing feedback to their care providers, feeling gratitude for care received, becoming aware of a new state of normal, regaining control of their lives, and ultimately discovering meaning and an important lesson behind their illness experience. Our study's findings suggest that the PSP storytelling approach holds potential as a relational intervention to support COVID-19 survivors along a recovery journey. This study also adds knowledge about survivors beyond the first few months of recovery.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- coronavirus disease
- sars cov
- end stage renal disease
- young adults
- randomized controlled trial
- mental health
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- quality improvement
- acute care
- prognostic factors
- physical activity
- case report
- traumatic brain injury
- hepatitis c virus
- chronic pain
- risk assessment
- health insurance
- patient reported
- single cell
- electronic health record
- sleep quality