Authors
Katrine Astrup, Pia Dreyer, Helene Korvenius Nedergaard, Nanna Rolving, Helle Svenningsen, Anette Bjerregaard Alrø, Mette Møller, Ann Louise Hanifa, Hanne Irene Jensen, Anne Sophie Ågård, Jesper Dahlgaard, Maja O'Connor, Anna Holm
Published in
BMC health services research. Jul 04, 2026. Epub Jul 04, 2026.
Abstract
Patients who survive critical illness and intensive care unit (ICU) admission often experience long-lasting physical, psychological, and cognitive impairments. Cognitive impairments are common and may persist well beyond ICU discharge. Few structured interventions address these impairments across the care continuum, from the ICU to post-discharge recovery. This gap informed the development of a stakeholder-driven cognitive rehabilitation intervention. The aim was to develop a cognitive rehabilitation intervention for critically ill patients that bridges the period from ICU admission to post-discharge recovery.
The intervention was developed using a multiphase process guided by the 2021 Medical Research Council (MRC) framework for complex interventions and reported in line with the GUIDED and TIDieR checklists. Stakeholder input was gathered through: (1) a workshop (n = 11) to identify end-user needs; (2) a three-round Delphi process (n = 39) to prioritise interventions using a seven-point Likert scale; and (3) expert consultations to refine selected components. Qualitative data from the workshop and open-ended Delphi responses were analysed thematically, while quantitative analysis identified consensus, defined a priori as ≥80% agreement on importance.
The process generated a range of proposed interventions, including both novel and established elements. Interventions reaching stakeholder consensus were further reviewed by experts for clinical relevance and feasibility. Two prototype interventions were selected: (1) a Mindfulness-based intervention and (2) a Brain Training intervention.
This study outlines a stakeholder-informed process for developing a cognitive rehabilitation intervention tailored to ICU patients across the care continuum. The co-design approach improved contextual fit and clinical applicability. These findings support the planned feasibility evaluation of the proposed interventions.
The overall research study received ethics approval, while formal ethics committee approval was not required for the workshop and Delphi activities under Danish legislation (osf.io/5a4xq).
PMID:
42401953
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 05 Jul 2026.
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