The relatives’ room

Although all hospitals are different, every intensive care unit (ICU) will have a room normally just outside the ICU for the use of relatives, partners or the close friends of patients. This room may be called ‘the relatives’ room’, ‘visitors’ room’ or ‘waiting room’. Visitors are usually asked by staff to wait in this room while the patient is being treated, washed, turned or seen by doctors. Relatives’ rooms vary in size and in terms of facilities. They can range from fairly small and basic to comfortable, with tea and coffee-making facilities, kitchen, toilet and even a shower.

Here people talk about their experiences of the ICU relatives’ room.

Most people had used the relatives’ room while the critically ill person had been in intensive care. Many had found it comfortable and said they’d valued having somewhere to wait, close to the ICU itself. It was often while they were waiting in this room that they’d met other visitors. Some recalled observing the highs and lows other visitors went through as the patient had improved or deteriorated, and described how they’d been able to relate to these emotions because they’d experienced them too or had been going through them. This shared empathy for one another’s crisis often created a bond between them.

She felt that visitors were supportive of each other and, because her son was so young, she…

Age at interview 49

Gender Female

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Some people said they’d tried to support other visitors by comforting or reassuring them. Occasionally they’d been able to talk about the progress their own patient had made as a way of instilling hope in others. One man, an ICU consultant whose father had been critically ill, had been in a unique position to comfort others by answering their questions.

When other visitors asked him questions, it reinforced for him just how important it was for…

Age at interview 48

Gender Male

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He tried to give support and encouragement to a man who was losing hope for his critically ill son.

Age at interview 66

Gender Male

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She gained comfort from talking to other people in the relatives room and did her best to be as…

Age at interview 59

Gender Female

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Some people had found it difficult meeting others in the relatives’ room, especially if these visitors had experienced a death, because they hadn’t felt strong enough to deal with other peoples’ trauma as well as their own. They said they’d been unable to support other visitors at this time because they’d been too deeply enmeshed in their own crisis to be of any real help. Often, it had also been a stark reminder of just how close to death ICU patients usually were.

She found it upsetting talking to people who’d been bereaved but reassuring to see some people…

Age at interview 34

Gender Female

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She found it extremely traumatic when someone died and difficult to be supportive to others when…

Age at interview 58

Gender Female

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Some people said they hadn’t spoken to other visitors in the relatives’ room, having usually been the only person using the room. Others said that, although they’d had brief, casual conversations with other visitors, their time had mostly been spent talking to members of their own family who were visiting at the same time.

Many of the visitors she saw in the relatives’ room were understandably wrapped up in their own…

Age at interview 70

Gender Female

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Some people said that, because there had been only one relatives’ room and quite a number of visitors, it had felt too small. A few of these people felt that facilities for relatives could have been improved.

The relatives’ room wasn’t really big enough and you couldn’t make yourself a drink.

Age at interview 46

Gender Female

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While the critically ill person was being treated or seen by ICU staff, some people had taken the opportunity to phone and update others or get something to eat. A few who had waited in the relatives’ room said they’d felt ‘forgotten’ because the nurse hadn’t called them back in for what seemed like hours. While they’d been left waiting, some had become anxious that the patient might have deteriorated.

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Overnight accommodation

When relatives and close friends are caring for someone who is critically ill in ICU it is very important their own needs are remembered. For...