What are the common reactions to hospitalization?

Hospitalization is a critical issue for older patients, about 40% of the hospitalized adults are 65 years of age or older, and this percentage is expected to rise as the population continues to age [5].

From: Molecular Basis of Nutrition and Aging, 2016

Fear.

An emotional response characterized by an expectation of harm or unpleasantness.

Usually associated with behavior that attempts to avoid or flee a threatening situation.

Patient is usually aware of the specific danger and has some understanding into the reasons for the fear.

Common indications of fear include:

  • Tachycardia (rapid heart rate).
  • Dry mouth.
  • Constipation.
  • Hypertension.
  • Increased perspiration.
  • The “fight or flight” reaction (alertness and readiness for action in order to avoid or escape harm).

Anxiety.

An emotional response characterized by feelings of uneasiness and apprehension of a probable danger or misfortune.

Patient who is anxious usually is unaware of the cause of the anxiety.

Behaviors are similar to those seen with the fear, but are not usually as dramatic.

Because the patient does not know its specific cause, he/she usually focuses on the physiologic symptoms of anxiety, to include:

  • Fatigue.
  • Insomnia.
  • Diarrhea or constipation.
  • Urgency.
  • Nausea.
  • Anorexia.
  • Excessive perspiration.

Stress.

A state of strain or tension.

Occurs in situations, which require an increased and often prolonged effort to adjust.

Any factor that disturbs the physical, psychological, or physiological homeostasis of the body may be stressful.

As with fear, the body tries to rid itself of the factor causing the stress.

Physical signs of stress include:

  • Ulcers.
  • Hair loss.
  • Insomnia.

Over Dependency or Feelings of Helplessness.

Over dependency is a response characterized by feelings of helplessness while trying to search for help and understanding (to an extent beyond what is considered normal).

Helplessness is a response characterized by feelings of being unable to avoid an unpleasant experience.

While healthy people may show some degree of dependence on others during illness, this dependence often increases to the point of being harmful to the patient.

The over dependent patient may be fearful or angry.


Sometimes one problem leads to another. When hospitalized, certain people—those who are confused, depressed, or undernourished or who are older—often become less able to take care of themselves. People who cannot adequately care for themselves are more likely to have longer stays in hospital and end up being sent to a nursing home after discharge.

If the person or family members anticipate problems, they should discuss preventive measures with staff members. For example, if communicating is a problem because English is not the person’s first language or if hearing is impaired, family members should tell hospital staff members. Staff members can take measures to help, such as arranging for someone to translate.

Each personality type presents with different methods of coping. Physicians should be aware of the impact on a patient's psychological functioning and ability to cope with illness and hospitalization, to understand and more effectively manage the patient. The physician must try to assess the patient's baseline personality from their past and present behavior. Establishing a good physician-patient relationship is important as a source of information about behavior of patients and how they will respond to their illness. Depending on the specific personality type, each patient will respond differently to the stress of illness. The effort of the emergency physician to identify personality types will aid in medical management of the patient and enable the physician to help each patient cope effectively with the illness and the hospitalization. The specific issues that seem to be threatening to traumatized patients include the following: helplessness, humiliation, blurring of body image, and gaps in memory filled with distortions. The traumatized patient experiences an altered state of consciousness which is either due to a physiologic cause or an emotional cause. Emotional causes are usually based on defensive dissociation. People who have been in an auto accident characteristically report loss of memory of the intense pain that the accident produces initially. Oftentimes, the core experience for the traumatic patient is not somatic, it is unconscious. The interesting feature is that so many patients do not remember the accident. The mind seems to be filled with all kinds of distortions and irrelevant and perhaps totally inconsistent fantasies, such as imprisonment, confinement, or deathlike experiences. Some report that they are being incarcerated, others recall being in a featureless cubicle with no contact with the normal world in which there are no windows, no pictures, no flowers. Others remember only being surrounded by masked, hatted, uniformed wardens who are standing over them with nasogastric tubes, intravenous lines, Foley catheters, arterial blood gases, subclavians, and dermal cut-downs. This is an overwhelming nightmare that can be relieved only by the empathic and caring physician and emergency department staff. The stress of medical illness and/or hospitalization can be overwhelming for some patients and is usually followed by some form of psychological response. Current understanding of the psychological impact of illness is based upon psychological defenses, coping mechanisms, and individual personality. It is the ability of the emergency physician to identify defenses, coping skills and personality types that will aid him or her in the medical management of the patients in their time of illness and hospitalization.

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