What did you find most surprising once you were out of the ICU?
Being in the ICU as either a patient or a family member is a difficult experience for most people. However, transitioning out of the ICU can be challenging as well. When either you or a family member no longer required critical care and were transferred out of the ICU, what were some of the things that surprised you the most?
MODERATOR'S NOTE
The knowledge exchange shared in this discussion helped to create this article written for the Mayo Clinic app. Knowledge for patients by patients and beyond Mayo Clinic Connect.
- After the ICU: Advice from people who've been there https://www.mayoclinic.org/CPT-20514168
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Intensive Care (ICU) Support Group.
@seanne what incredible testimony to the power of Peer Support! Thank you for your words -
Hi @seanne @heartbreaker @plexiclone @alex12119 @johnshaw @cindyvag @flagal22 @smoky and everyone in this discussion thread. It's been a few months since you posted here, so I wanted to get an update now that time has passed. How are you doing? Have some of the post-ICU symptoms started to fade or have their been some unexpected surprises? What challenges and triumphs of recovery would you like to share?
It's been a year and 4 months since I was in ICU, and I still avoid any and all invasive procedures, including imaging. I just explain to doctors that I have developed an aversion to hospitals, providers, and procedures. Some times I feel so sorry for what my body went through that I weep. Amazingly, the hospital where I had the open heart surgery apparently has never heard of psychiatric reactions to medical trauma, and could not provide me with any support whatsoever -- calls to psychologists were never returned, follow up with discharge planner was minimal, until I finally called the suicide hotline 2 months after the surgery. If you can do anything about getting providers to include PTSD from medical trauma or post- ICU depression in their care plans, do it. You can send them this posting. It took a concerted effort for providers to do something about post-partum depression, and now we must do the same for post-ICU depression.
Hello @heartbreaker,
I am sorry to hear that you have not been able to find help for the trauma you experienced. Some areas of medicine are certainly slow in catching up with the needs of individuals like yourself.
If you are still looking for a counselor/psychologist to assist you I would recommend that you contact NAMI, National Alliance on Mental Illness. Here is a link to their website, https://www.nami.org/
On their home page, there are crisis phone numbers listed as well as information regarding support groups. There may be others like you that you can connect with.
Will you post again and provide an update on how you are doing?
Thank you for your concern. I finally found a counselor at another hospital who had the same surgery I did. He is very compassionate. I also tell every doctor I encounter what I went through, and let them deal with it. My friends who know me, and know that my husband was terminally ill at the time I was in ICU, still wonder how I survived the whole thing. My husband died 3 months later but I was able to be with him. Right now I am somewhat less depressed but still purposeless.
Hello @heartbreaker,
It is so good to read your post and know that you did find a counselor to assist you.
You have certainly experienced a great deal of trauma with your own health issues and with your husband's death (all quite close in time). You undoubtedly need to give yourself time to recover from this loss and to begin to engage in life again.
What thoughts do you have right now regarding finding a new purpose in life?
Alex, I hope that you've continued to heal since you wrote this post nearly 18 months ago! I laughed when I read that you didn't know you were in kidney failure. I had a similar moment, as I sat on my couch with my long oxygen "leash" that tethered me to 24/7 oxygen and read that I had Respiratory Failure! "Holy crap---I didn't know I had respiratory failure!" I said to my husband. He chuckled and picked up my oxygen hose and said, "No? What was your first clue?" (He'd had months to process that information, but I'd only been aware for a couple of weeks!)
I'm glad that you're taking pictures. I am doing the same; I even saved a "spare" tracheotomy set that I found in my bags of supplies from the hospital; it's a concrete example of what my body went through, even though my mind was often far away.
Hi @donna562, it sounds like the evidence of the "spare" tracheotomy set is an important reminder of what your body went through without your mind knowing it. Do this help you to be kinder to yourself as you recover and be patient with the healing? How are you doing with processing the ICU experience as time goes on?
Hello Everyone. I am new to this discussion and all I can say after reading many of the posts is WOW! I have read many posts about knowing anything about PICS or having medical staff that know or understand PICS. You have been the trailblazers for patients like me that now get some information upon discharge. And to have the ICU Follow-Up Team with @andreab to introduce me to this discussion and help me start to cope with things. I have not been critically ill before my scary night of struggling to breathe nor have I ever had any chronic illnesses. Like many of you, I am struggling with not being able to "snap back" to normal within days of being released from the hospital. I have been back home for almost 6 weeks now and while I am doing well with my recovery some things are still affecting me.
For me the biggest thing I still struggle with is the fear and anxiety that it will happen again. I had Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) and got sick fast with no warning. In less than an hour I went from feeling normal to not being able to breath. It is also hard for me to accept that some things like climbing stairs still makes me winded.
Adding a response to the original post on this board, I also found the transfer from ICU to a normal hospital room was a big change about the level of activity going on around you. I can say a comparison would be when I worked Black Friday in retail (ICU) to my current job quietly sitting at home working remotely on a computer all day (non-ICU). I was sedated my first couple days in the ICU so I was not awake for the worst of the it. And after I was no longer sedated, my whole ICU team was very calm and level-headed, there was still a sense of fast-paced activity.
The transition from hospital to home for me was that everyone around me was one extreme or the other. Either they treated me like I was no longer sick and "back to normal" since I was out of the hospital, or they treated me like I was so sick I couldn't do anything for myself.
Once I got home, I was not at all prepared for waking up in the middle of the night thinking I was still in the ICU. It took me about a week to be able to wake up and know I was at home. One thing still happening that I am struggle with is that I feel like I am actually losing my memory of what happened while I was sick. I am finding out more information that sometime contradicts my memories so I don't really trust my memories of that time any more. And I am realizing that the memories I do have do not accurately reflect time. It is things like thinking I was only in the ED (emergency department) for a couple of hours before being transferred to the ICU when in reality the line between what was the ED and what was the ICU is completely blurred (or missing) in my mind. I remember being loaded into the ambulance but don't remember being rolled into the ED. I remember being taken for a scan of my lungs but don't remember getting back to a room. I remember being placed on a c-pap machine but don't know if it was the ED or ICU. This was all on a Sunday. I don't have any other memories until that Wednesday. They told me I was sedated but that for 2 days they would bring me out of sedation for a little bit through the day. I have zero memories of that. I actually felt bad when someone who helped move to out of the ICU told me she was there on Tuesday and I had tried to write someone down and ask her something. I had to admit I had no memory of doing that.
Thanks again to everyone who is sharing their story here. I hope to be able to come back to here and post more and read more as time passes.
Jennifer
@jready,
Hi Jennifer. I have just now seen your post, and I want to send you a quick reply before I sign off for the night.
12 years ago, I was in ICU with acute kidney failure. Your story sound so much like what I went thru, even though for a different condition. I also began at the Emergency Department, then ambulance ride to larger regional hospital with acute kidney failure (while I was waiting for a liver transplant. After 6 days I was flown to the Mayo Clinic where I was hospitalized for 2 more weeks. I had gaps in memory, and I was so confused that I had to ask my husband to fill in what had occurred. I cried when he told me all that had been going on. But it was still frustrating and confusing because he saw it from a different view point; he did not undergo the tests that, even to this day. are a mystery. But that was 12 years ago and it does not disturb me any more because newer memories have taken priority in my mind.
I drove my husband crazy with questions, but I needed to get some order for my confusion. Was someone with you who could fill-in the blanks? That might be a beginning to making some order out of the events that occurred.
Jennifer, I am happy that you are here. You are not alone, and you are not the only person to have these feelings. I look forward to chatting with you about some of your experiences and my similar experiences.
Rosemary