38. The Family and Transport

CHAPTER 38. The Family and Transport

Reneé Semonin Holleran


Competencies




1. Perform a focused assessment of the needs of families before, during, and after transport.


2. Identify the advantages and disadvantages to allowing the family to accompany the patient during transport.


3. Describe methods to meet the needs of the family.


Patient care during transport is generally focused on meeting the physiologic needs of an acutely ill or injured patient. However, the patient is generally a part of a family, although the definition of the term may vary. A family may be described in legal, cultural, religious, or personal terms. The families of today are as diverse as the people who live in them. 5

Although transport team members are accustomed to the transport environment and process, they should not forget that this experience is new and often frightening for the family members of a seriously ill or injured person. The transport team must consider care of the family to be an extension of patient care and not an additional task that needs to be accomplished. The support that healthcare professionals provide to the patient’s family during the initial stages of the patient’s crisis can be invaluable. Contact with a transport team or emergency department (ED) employees may be the family’s first interaction with healthcare personnel in this emergency. The family’s perception of the response of these healthcare providers can be the impetus to either healthy or ineffective coping. Ideally, early interventions aimed at decreasing the family’s stress should be performed to prevent the breakdown of the family structure. 9,10,15

Death of the patient, unfortunately, is an inherent part of the transport process. Some patients die before transport, and the role the family may play in this dying process can make patient care particularly arduous for the transport team. Whether the family is allowed to be present during resuscitation attempts is an issue that has been gaining attention from both healthcare professionals and the public. Families now demand to be a part of the resuscitation so that they can at least say goodbye to their loved ones no matter where the resuscitation takes place. 16,19.20.21.22.23.24. and 25.

This chapter presents the advantages and disadvantages of allowing the family to accompany the patient during transport, the importance of family presence, and how to meet the needs of the family involved in transport.


FAMILY ISSUES RELATING TO TRANSPORT OF THE PATIENT


Family members of critically ill or injured patients are already under stress, 3 and the need to transport the patient on a fixed-wing aircraft, helicopter, or ground vehicle adds to that level of stress. 17 Decisions concerning care must be made quickly, and the patient’s family members often feel uninformed and unsure, especially if they have limited medical knowledge. Because time is a factor, the family has no opportunity to elicit medical information and request second opinions.

Family members may feel uncomfortable relaying concerns about the transport to the healthcare providers and transport team. Some concerns are related to the medical treatment rendered or even the safety of transport (Figure 38-1). Other concerns may include17,24:








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FIGURE 38-1
Example of a critically ill patient on a left ventricular assist device who needs to be transferred to another facility for care.

(Courtesy Stanford Life Transport.)




▪ Separation from their loved one for the duration or distance of the transport.


▪ Uncertainty about the events that necessitated transfer and transport of the patient.


▪ Lack of understanding of the medical diagnosis.


▪ The referring physicians, nurses, and transport team members are unfamiliar to the family and patient.

Because most patients who need critical care transport have injuries or illnesses that are sudden and unplanned, family members usually do not have time to prepare for the emergency. If they have never been exposed to this type of crisis, they may not have the coping skills needed to effectively manage the stress entailed. 10


Referring Facility


The transport team should make every effort to speak with the patient’s family before leaving the referring facility. This interaction may be as simple as an introduction, such as “Hi, my name is Jane Doe, and I am the transport nurse who will be with your family member during the transport.” During this interaction, the team can assess the family. The team can then alert personnel at the receiving hospital’s social or pastoral service department if it appears that the family may need their assistance. The transport team can also take this opportunity to determine the family’s plans for traveling to the receiving hospital and get an estimate of their time en route. Family members should be notified of the transport vehicle’s intended destination, and they should be told where to report once they arrive at the receiving facility. If necessary, directions to the receiving hospital can be given to the family. Many transport programs provide individual maps for this purpose. When possible, the family should be provided with a specific individual name or place they may ask for when arriving at the receiving facility. The transport team can offer to contact the family via cell phone at the conclusion of the transport. This practice is particularly useful with pediatric patients to help alleviate parental anxiety.

The transport team may pause before leaving the institution to allow family members to say goodbye to the patient. This is especially important if the patient’s injuries are life threatening; in this case, the family may not have another opportunity to speak to the patient before he or she dies. In this author’s experience, the opportunity to say goodbye to the patient is greatly appreciated by the family. In most cases, depending on the severity of the patient’s injuries, the transport can be delayed for a few minutes without negative effects on the patient’s outcome. These simple interactions between the family and the transport team are invaluable in helping to alleviate the family’s stress.

Fultz and colleagues13 conducted a study to identify the information needs of family members regarding air medical transport. The information needs rated as very important by family members included what was wrong with the patient, why the patient had to be flown to another facility, and where the patient could be found at the receiving hospital. Box 38-1 lists important needs that most family members perceived as being unmet. 13 The results of this research are important no matter how the patient is transported. Transport programs should use this information as a guide when providing care to the family to better care for the needs of the patient’s family.

BOX 38-1
Family Needs of Patients Transported via Helicopter



Family members of patients who need helicopter transport perceived that they lacked the following:




1. The opportunity to see the patient before he or she was put in the helicopter.


2. Information about who would take care of the patient in transport.


3. Information about the safety of air transport.


4. Directions to the receiving hospital.


5. Knowledge about how the patient fared during the transport.

From Fultz JH, et al: Air medical transport: what the family wants to know, J Air Med Trans 431, 1993.


Receiving Facility


Information concerning the patient’s family members should be communicated to the receiving hospital to facilitate continuity of care. The social services department of the receiving hospital can be alerted to cases in which their services may be especially needed. Personnel at receiving hospitals want to know whether the family plans to travel to their hospital. Because large distances must sometimes be covered by ground, an estimated time of arrival is useful. Knowledge of the family’s plans can be helpful in case the patient’s condition deteriorates and consent to perform particular procedures is needed. The hospital may need to know the family’s wishes for treatment if the patient’s condition is life threatening. Organ procurement issues can be considered if the staff knows when and if the family intends to arrive. These issues are particularly important if the patient is a minor.

Family members frequently leave the referring facility as soon as the decision is made to transfer the patient, and they may arrive at the receiving hospital ahead of the patient. In this case, the referring nurse can notify the receiving hospital of the family’s departure for their facility. If the receiving hospital is aware of the family’s intended time of arrival, they can direct the family to the appropriate area in the hospital.


Transporting Family Members


Family members frequently ask whether they can travel to the receiving facility with the patient. In this era, patients and families are more assertive in making their requests known to the medical community. Research continues to show that patients, families, and healthcare providers can benefit from family presence. 1,2,21,22

The decision to transport a family member is based on multiple factors, some more important than others. The personal feelings of a team member should not interfere with a decision on what is best for the patient and family. The entire transport team should provide input, but safety should always be the overriding principle. In air medical transport, the pilot has the final word. Safety for the entire team is the primary factor on which to base this decision when concern exists about the possibility of family interference.

Other factors the team may take into consideration when deciding whether to transport members of the patient’s family are the patient’s age, the seriousness of the patient’s condition, other transportation available to the family, and the length of the transport time. Box 38-2 provides examples of inclusion and exclusion criteria for transport of family members.

BOX 38-2
Examples of Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria for Determination of Whether Family Members Should Accompany a Patient During Air Medical Transport



Inclusion of family members during air medical transport may be desirable in the following cases:




The referring facility is far from the receiving facility, and the family has no other means of transportation.


The patient is near death, and the family wishes to be with the patient during his or her last moments.


The patient is a child and would benefit from being accompanied by a parent.


The family and the patient both strongly want the family to accompany the patient.

Exclusion of family members during air medical transport may be desirable in the following cases:




Inclusion of the family member will interfere with patient care.


The family member’s weight exceeds permissible parameters.


The family member is overly anxious and poses a danger to the safety of the transport.


The landing zone is walled in on three sides, and the pilot must do a vertical takeoff.


A crew member has a concern about a family member.


Weather conditions are marginal.


The family member has a fear of flying.


The family member gets motion sickness.


The distance between the two facilities is short.


The patient’s condition is unstable and requires extensive care.

Some transport vehicles, particularly air medical, are not capable of carrying an additional passenger because of performance factors or space limitations. Although the aircraft may have the capability of carrying extra passengers, some limitations, including engine power, effects of weather on equipment performance, and the amount of weight the aircraft can safely carry, determine whether an additional passenger can be brought aboard.

Parents often ask whether they can accompany their child on the transport. Determination of whether the presence of the family member will pose a problem during transport is important because of an inappropriate level of anxiety. All family members exhibit some anxiety, and thus, anxiety should not rule out the possibility of the person going on the transport. The determination must be made on the basis of whether inclusion of the family members will interrupt the transport team’s duties if they sit in the front or interfere with care to the patient if they sit in the back. It cannot be stressed enough that if transporting the family member in any way jeopardizes safety or care, the family member should not be transported.

The transport team may want to exclude the family from the transport when the weather is marginal. This factor can apply to either a ground or an air vehicle. Diversions or precautionary landings require extra concentration on the part of the pilot; thus, interference with flying can occur if the pilot has to explain what is happening or calm a worried passenger. Ground vehicle drivers need to be able to address their full concentration on roads that may be ice covered or if visibility is impaired by fog.

Once the determination to transport family members is made, they need a safety briefing by the pilot in an air medical vehicle or the driver in a ground vehicle. The family member should be directed to the transport vehicle for the briefing while the patient is being prepared for the transport; this gives the pilot or driver an appropriate amount of time to conduct the safety briefing. The extra passenger can be belted in the seat and be ready for departure. If this is done before the patient reaches the vehicle, the transport is not delayed.

Edgington8 conducted a survey of all air medical programs in North America to investigate whether family or friends are taken on transports. The results showed that 60% of the programs carried extra passengers. The helicopter programs that carried family members did not advertise that they did so, and they transported them on less than 5% of their transports. Extra passengers were taken more frequently on transports of children. Fixed-wing aircraft programs transported family members on 35% to 95% of their transports. One fixed-wing aircraft program located in the Midwest claimed to carry family members on almost every transport. A program located in the West indicated that offering to transport family members was important because their transferring sites were so remote that the family refused to consent to the transfer unless they were allowed to accompany the patient. 8

Forty percent of the programs surveyed did not transport family members. Box 38-3 summarizes the reasons that influenced the decision by these programs not to transport family members. Of the programs surveyed, the ones that carried extra passengers listed the benefits of transporting family members. Box 38-4 lists some of these benefits. Problems with the transfers were rare; only three problems were listed. On one transport, a child experienced respiratory arrest and the parent was asked to assist in ventilation. In the other two cases, the passengers experienced airsickness. One program in Oregon has a pretransport screening form to determine a prospective rider’s suitability for transport. The form included questions about whether the potential passenger had had “recent alcohol or drug consumption, inner ear problems, pregnancy, back or joint trouble, and recent blood donation or dental work.”8

BOX 38-3
Reasons for Deciding Against Transport of Family Members







Liability concerns


Lack of useful load on the aircraft


Exposure of the family to invasive medical procedures


Operator restrictions


Lack of insurance for passengers


Prohibition by the program’s operations manual


Concerns about a lack of time to properly brief family members
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Jul 4, 2016 | Posted by in ANESTHESIA | Comments Off on 38. The Family and Transport

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