1. "How does medical care become trauma?"
Medicine is "life-saving" action. But in the process, patients experience 1) loss of control, 2) life-or-death crisis, 3) bodily invasion (surgery, intubation), 4) absence of information, 5) family separation. This matches the DSM-5 definition of trauma ("actual or threatened death or serious injury"). Result: PTSD, depression, and cognitive impairment persist even after the medical episode ends.
2. Post-Intensive Care Syndrome (PICS)
Needham et al. (2012) JAMA definition: new or worsened impairment in physical, cognitive, or mental domains after ICU stay.
3 symptom axes
| Axis | Symptoms | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Physical | Post-ICU muscle weakness, joint stiffness, chronic pain, lowered respiratory function | 50–80% |
| Cognitive | Attention / memory / executive impairment ("ICU brain") | 30–80% |
| Psychological | PTSD, depression, anxiety | 30% |
Triggers for PICS
- Sedatives (benzos, etc.) → hallucinations, memory loss
- Use of restraints
- "I opened my eyes — ventilator, intubated, can't speak"
- Witnessing a nearby patient's code blue / death
- No family visitation (especially during COVID)
- Post-delirium hallucinations remain as "real memories"
3. Cancer-treatment PTSD
Cordova et al. (2017) meta-analysis: cancer-patient PTSD diagnosis rate 20%; subthreshold PTSD 35%. The diagnosis itself ("you have cancer") is a single shock; the treatment process (chemo side effects, surgery, recurrence anxiety) is chronic trauma.
Specific features
- 5–10 years of recurrence worry even after "cure" — chronic hyperarousal
- "Survivor" identity — comparison and survivor guilt vis-à-vis other patients
- Permanent body changes in treatment sites (chest, reproductive organs) → body-image trauma
- Relationship changes (spouse / children's "patient" perception)
4. Other forms of medical trauma
- Post-CPR survivor: chest pain, missing memory, "I died and came back" — PTSD 27% (Wilder Schaaf 2013)
- Birth trauma: emergency C-section, hemorrhage, neonatal crisis → PTSD 4%, subthreshold 30%, postpartum depression comorbid
- NICU parents: parents of preemies / severely ill newborns — PTSD 30%
- Medical-error victims: PTSD after misdiagnosis / surgical error
- Post-ER short-exposure PTSD: often overlooked
5. The lack of recognition in Korean medicine
- Hospital rounds center on physical recovery — no mental evaluation
- Psychiatry-consult rate in ICU / cancer wards is under 5% (with some university-hospital exceptions)
- Discharge says only "recover well" — no trauma follow-up
- Insurance non-coverage (psychiatry-consult time limited)
- "You're lucky to be alive" social messaging silences patients
6. How patients can self-protect
During admission / treatment
- Actively request "please explain" for procedures you don't understand
- Have family or a caregiver present as a "witness"
- Record experience in a journal or voice memo
- Consent / understand sedation; ask about Sedation Vacation
After discharge
- Self-assess at 1, 3, 6, 12 months post-discharge (PCL-5 PTSD self-test)
- Intrusion / avoidance / hyperarousal lasting 1+ month → psychiatric evaluation
- EMDR / CPT trauma-specialized treatment
- Medical-trauma self-help groups (limited in Korea — use English-language online groups)
7. What family can do
During admission
- Visit and speak as often as possible (even comatose patients retain hearing)
- Familiar photos, objects, music
- Repeat "you are safe — we are here"
- Share information with clinicians (patient's baseline personality, prior trauma)
After discharge
- When the patient wants to talk about their experience, listen without judgment
- Don't say "it's all over now" — be patient through 1–2 years of recovery
- Family PTSD also requires evaluation (family PTSD 25%)
8. Clinicians' moral injury
Doctors and nurses face the other side of medical trauma. Witnessing "therapeutic action" causing patient suffering daily → moral injury. Litz et al. (2009): not only soldiers but clinicians follow the same pathway. 50%+ of Korean clinicians during COVID-19 had clinical depression / burnout.
Clinician self-care
- Schwartz Rounds — clinician emotion-sharing groups
- Peer Support
- EAP (at some university hospitals)
- Create your own "ritual" for patient deaths / trauma (a simple memorial)
9. Korean resources
- University-hospital psycho-oncology: SNU, Samsung Seoul, Severance, National Cancer Center
- ICU Follow-Up clinics: pilot programs at some university hospitals (Asan, Yonsei, etc.)
- Korean Society for Hospice and Palliative Care: integrated care
- Korean Psycho-Oncology Society: materials, specialists
- Clinician mental health: clinician-only EAP, SNU Hospital "Healing Forest", etc.
- 1577-0199: for suicidal thoughts