Restricted visitation policies in acute care settings
during the COVID-19 pandemic: a scoping review
by Stephana J. Moss, Karla D. Krewulak, Henry T. Stelfox,
Sofia B. Ahmed, Melanie C. Anglin, Sean M. Bagshaw, Karen E. A. Burns, Deborah
J. Cook, Christopher J. Doig, Alison Fox-Robichaud, Robert Fowler, Laura
Hernández, Michelle E. Kho, Maia Kredentser, Kira Makuk, Srinivas Murthy…
Critical Care volume 25,
Article number: 347; Published: 25
September 2021
Background
Restricted visitation policies in acute care settings
because of the COVID-19 pandemic have negative consequences. The objective of
this scoping review is to identify impacts of restricted visitation policies in
acute care settings, and describe perspectives and mitigation approaches among
patients, families, and healthcare professionals.
Methods
We searched Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, Healthstar, CINAHL,
Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials on January 01/2021,
unrestricted, for published primary research records reporting any study
design. We included secondary (e.g., reviews) and non-research records (e.g.,
commentaries), and performed manual searches in web-based resources. We
excluded records that did not report primary data. Two reviewers independently
abstracted data in duplicate.
Results
Of 7810 citations, we included 155 records. Sixty-six
records (43%) were primary research; 29 (44%) case reports or case series, and
26 (39%) cohort studies; 21 (14%) were literature reviews and 8 (5%) were expert
recommendations; 54 (35%) were commentary, editorial, or opinion pieces.
Restricted visitation policies impacted coping and daily function (n = 31, 20%)
and mental health outcomes (n = 29, 19%) of patients, families, and healthcare
professionals. Participants described a need for coping and support (n = 107,
69%), connection and communication (n = 107, 69%), and awareness of state of
well-being (n = 101, 65%). Eighty-seven approaches to mitigate impact of
restricted visitation were identified, targeting families (n = 61, 70%),
patients (n = 51, 59%), and healthcare professionals (n = 40, 46%).
Conclusions
Patients, families, and healthcare professionals were
impacted by restricted visitation polices in acute care settings during
COVID-19. The consequences of this approach on patients and families are
understudied and warrant evaluation of approaches to mitigate their impact.
Future pandemic policy development should include the perspectives of patients,
families, and healthcare professionals.
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