ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Characteristics of the 33-item instrument
The response rate was excellent [mean, 99.3%±3.1%] for all items except item 11, which had 18.6% of missing answers. There was no ceiling or floor effect [as defined in the methods section]; however, items 8, 12, and 25 had high proportions of maximal scores[5 i.e. comforting; 84%, 80.3%, and 84%, respectively]. Conversely, the proportion of lowest scores [1, traumatic] was highest for item 1 [23.2%] and was greater than 10% for items 3, 21, and 27. The following item pairs had Spearman’s correlation coefficients[r] greater than 0.6: 5 and 6 [r=0.788], 4 and 8 [r=0.629], 7 and 8 [r=0.655], 4 and 12 [r=0.623], items 9 and 12 [r=0.673], items 4 and 14 [r=0.654], items 7 and 14 [r=0.602], items 8 and 12 [r=0.633], items 9 and 14 [r=0.684], items 12 and 14 [r=0.7], and items 15 and 18 [r=0.624]. Factorial analysis identified three groups of items according to their contribution: strong[items 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 12, 14, 15, and 18], moderate[items 1, 3, 6, 10, 13, 17, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 27, 28, 30, and 33], and weak[items 16, 19, 25, 26, 29, 31, and 32]. These data were discussed by the multidisciplinary panel of 10 investigators, who decided to eliminate 18 items, leaving the following 15 items: 2, 4, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 26, 29, 30, and 32.
The scores correlated strongly with each individual item score [rs=0.39–0.79].
Table S1: 50 initial items
The patient- Did your loved one have a chronic illness?
- Did your loved one have an acute illness?
- Did your loved one receive mechanical ventilation in the ICU?
- Did your loved one receive dialysis in the ICU?
- Was your loved one able to eat independently?
Preparation for the end of life
- Do you believe your loved one was aware that she/he was dying? If so, who told her/him?
- Was your loved one able to communicate with you during the ICU stay?
- Did the intensive treatment received in the ICU have meaning for your loved one?
- Do you believe your loved one was afraid of dying during the ICU stay? Did you notice any signs of worry or anxiety?
- Did your loved one smile or laugh during the ICU stay?
- Were you able to say goodbye to your loved one?
- Did you express important feelings to your loved one during the ICU stay?
- Had your loved onemade funeral arrangements?
- Had your loved onewritten advance directives?
- Did the ICU team give your loved one the opportunity to discuss her/his wishes?
- Did your loved one refuse anyof the suggested treatments?
Pain and symptom management
- Was your loved one’s pain well controlledthroughout the ICU stay?
- Was your loved oneable to breathe comfortably?
- Did your loved one spend time alone during the ICU stay?
- Do you believe your loved one felt alone during the ICU stay?
- Did palliative-care specialists help to care for your loved one?
The person as a whole
- Do you believe that your loved one’s dignity was maintained?
- Do you believe the ICU team was attentive to your loved one?
- Did a representative of your loved one’s religious community visit during the ICU stay?
- Did your loved onerequest and obtain a spiritual service or ceremony before dying?
Dying in the ICU
- Were you present when your loved one died?
- Do you believe your loved one was conscious at the time of death (for instance was able to hear)?
- Did your loved one die peacefully?
Interactions and communication
Patient centred
- Did you have physical contact with your loved one? Did you touch each other?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of the communication between the physicians and your loved one?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of the communication between the nurses and your loved one?
- Was the ICU team kind to your loved one?
Family centred
- During the days beforethe death, were you clearly informed that your loved one was dying? If yes, by whom?
- If you answered yes to item 33, how was this information conveyed?
- Were you given the opportunity to discuss your loved one’s wishes, as well as your own preferences, with the ICU team?
- Were you in conflict with the ICU team?
- Were you able to stay at your loved one’s bedside as much as you wanted?
Satisfaction
- Are you satisfied with the overall end-of-life care given to your loved one?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of the medical care received by your loved one?
- Are you satisfied with the support you received from the physician while your loved one was dying?
- Are you satisfied with the support you received from the nurses while your loved one was dying?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of communication between you and the physicians?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of communication between you and the nurses?
- Did the ICU team organise a specific meeting to discuss the end-of-life needs of your loved one?
- Are you satisfied with the role you played during the discussions about the end-of-life care for your loved one?
- Do you believe the ICU team went too far in the treatment given to your loved one? Do you believe the ICU team used unnecessary treatments?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of information concerning the required administrative procedures after your loved one’s death?
Family support
- Were you in contact with your loved one’s general practitioner during the ICU stay?
- Did the ICU team contact you after your loved one’s death to discuss your experience and answer your questions [post-ICU visit]?
- During your loved one’s stay, did you receive counselling, for instance from a psychologist?
Table S2: 33 items kept after the first series of tests and discussions
- Was your loved one able to communicate with you during the ICU stay?
- Was your loved one’s pain well controlledthroughout the ICU stay?
- Was your loved oneable to breathe comfortably?
- Do you feel that your loved one dignity was maintained?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of the communication between the physicians and your loved one?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of the communication between the nurses and your loved one?
- Do you feel the ICU team was attentive to your loved one?
- Was the ICU team kind to your loved one?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of the medical care received by your loved one?
- During the days before death, were you clearly informed that your loved one was dying? If yes, by whom?
- If you answered yes to item 33, how was this information conveyed?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of communication between you and the physicians?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of communication between you and the nurses?
- Were you in conflict with the ICU team?
- Were you given the opportunity to discuss your loved one’s wishes, as well as your own preferences, with the ICU team?
- Had your loved one written advanced directives?
- Did your loved one refuse anyof the suggested treatments?
- Do you believe the ICU team went too far in the treatment given to your loved one? Do you believe the ICU team used unnecessary treatments?
- Were you in contact with your loved one’s general practitioner during the ICU stay?
- Did palliative-care specialists help to care for your loved one?
- Do you believe your loved one was aware that she/he was dying?
- Do you believe your loved one was afraid of dying during the ICU stay? Did you notice any signs of worry or anxiety?
- Do you believe your loved one felt alone during the ICU stay?
- Were you able to stay at your loved one’s bedside as much as you wanted?
- Did you have physical contact with your loved one? Did you touch each other?
- Did you express important feelings to your loved one during the ICU stay?
- Were you able to say goodbye to your loved one?
- Do you believe your loved one was conscious at the time of death (for instance was able to hear)?
- Were you present when your loved one died?
- Are you satisfied with the support you received while your loved one was dying?
- Did a representative of your loved one’s religious community visit during the ICU stay?
- During your loved one’s stay, did you receive counselling, for instance from a psychologist?
- Are you satisfied with the quality of information concerning the required administrative procedures after your loved one’s death?
Table S3: Spearman’s correlation coefficients between the global CAESAR score and the score on each individual item
Items in the 33-item questionnaire / Items in the 15-item CAESAR questionnaire / Spearman’s correlation coefficient / p value2 / 1 / 0.65 / <0.001
4 / 2 / 0.75 / <0.001
7 / 3 / 0.69 / <0.001
9 / 4 / 0.74 / <0.001
10 / 5 / 0.53 / <0.001
12 / 6 / 0.79 / <0.001
13 / 7 / 0.59 / <0.001
14 / 8 / 0.76 / <0.001
15 / 9 / 0.72 / <0.001
17 / 10 / 0.54 / <0.001
18 / 11 / 0.75 / <0.001
26 / 12 / 0.44 / <0.001
29 / 13 / 0.39 / <0.001
30 / 14 / 0.65 / <0.001
32 / 15 / 0.39 / <0.001
Table S4 Associations linking the CAESAR score tertile to clinical endpoints of relatives 3, 6, and 12 months after the patient’s death in the ICU, assessed by logistic regression.
3 monthsN=370/430
(86%) / 6 months
N=268/430
(62%) / 12 months
N=209/430
(49%)
OR [95% CI]
p value / HADS>18
Global scale / Anxiety subscale score≥8 / Depression subscale score≥8 / PTSD-related symptoms IES-R>32 / Complicated Grief
CGI >25 / PTSD-Related symptoms
IES-R >32 / Complicated Grief
CGI >25 / PTSD-Related symptoms
IES-R >32
Low vs. medium CAESAR score / 1.13 [1.01-1.27]
p=0.035 / 1.11 [0.98-1.26]
p=0.095 / 1.19 [1.05-1.33]
p=0.005 / 1.16 [1.03-1.32]
p=0.016 / 1.27 [1.10-1.47]
p=0.002 / 1.13 [0.98-1.32]
p=0.102 / 1.04 [0.87-1.24]
p=0.640 / 1.04 (0.87-1.23)
p=0.689
Low vs. high CAESAR score / 1.29 [1.13-1.46]
p=0.001 / 1.18 [1.03-1.35]
p=0.018 / 1.36 [1.20-1.54]
p<0.001 / 1.34 [1.17-1.53]
p<0.001 / 1.40 [1.20-1.63]
p<0.001 / 1.24 [1.06-1.44]
p=0.008 / 1.27 [1.06-1.52]
p=0.011 / 1.26 (1.06-1.50)
p=0.010
LEGENDS TO SUPPLEMENTAL FIGURES
Figure S1
CAESAR questionnaire [15 items]: distribution of individual item scores [panel A] and global scores [panel B]
Figure S2
Panel A: Eigenvalue diagram of the principal component analysis of the final 15-item CAESAR questionnaire. The screen plot shows a break before factor 2, supporting a single-component solution, as 42% of the variance is explained by the first principal component.
Panel B: Eigenvalue diagram of the principal component analysis of the final 15-item CAESAR questionnaire in the reliability cohort. The screen plot shows a break before factor 2, supporting a single-component solution, as 39% of the variance is explained by the first principal component.
Eigenvalues (or proper values) are a special set of scalars associated with a linear system of equations. It is one classic option for reporting aggregated numeric values.
Figure S1
Figure S2
A
B