End-life visits
Thousands of people have died because of the Covid-19 pandemic. Each number is a person who lost their life; each death was a loss for...
On this page partners and family members of people who have been critically ill with Covid talk about:
For patients’ experiences of sources of support see ‘Sources of support after coming home from hospital’.
The period during which a loved one had been critically ill in hospital was highly stressful and at times traumatising for family members. Not only because of the worry, but also because the experiences had been so isolating. People we interviewed found support through phone calls or walks, often with people who lived close by. Paula commented on the time when her husband Victor was in the ICU, whilst the UK was in lockdown: “People couldn’t come round, you couldn’t have people round, that was hard as well, whereas sometimes, in a previous life, you would have someone come round and sit with you. … My sisters would phone me, obviously my son was there… I would walk with my neighbour across the road. So, I could talk, we could talk.”
Some people had online prayer meetings to help them through the difficult times.
Many told us their children had been of immense support to them, although they did try to protect them from their emotions.
Support from others was vital in emotional and stressful times.
The time after their loved one was discharged home was also challenging for family members, but in different ways. Some family members we spoke to felt there was nowhere to turn to for help.
Some felt that there was no acknowledgement for what they had gone through during their loved one’s admission. Kate, whose husband had been in ICU, said: “It just felt like there’s no acknowledgement that as a family member going through that, which is not as bad as him, it’s not, that we’re not going through it. Once he’s home that it’s all sunshine and daisies. And it really isn’t. It really isn’t.” When asked about what would have helped her, Kate answered: “I think it would be useful just to talk about it … just being able to sit and talk about it, and say this is how it made me feel”. She emphasised that this support should be separate to support for her partner, because she “would not want to re-traumatise him”.
Some family members felt as if they did not have the right to find things hard, as others “had it worse”: for instance, Kate continuously compared her story to that of others, which made it hard to take her own suffering seriously.
In the absence of any formal support structures, others such as Sadia found online support groups helpful.
Some family members were offered support through their work. This was the case for Stephanie, but she found it difficult to take it up.
Even long after their loved one had come home from hospital, some family members continued to struggle with what had happened and its impacts on them. Kate struggled with anxiety a year after she had first called an ambulance for her husband. She found little relief from the medications she was prescribed by her GP and felt that what she needed most was somebody who listened to her.
Thousands of people have died because of the Covid-19 pandemic. Each number is a person who lost their life; each death was a loss for...
On this page people speak about being discharged from hospital after being in intensive care: How people felt about going home The timing of leaving...