This analysis looked at 319 people who survived a stay in the intensive care unit. Researchers checked their mental health right before they were officially assigned to a treatment group in a larger study. They wanted to see how sadness, worry, and trauma affected how patients felt about their daily lives.
Patients who scored high on depression screens had much worse health scores. Their average score was lower than those without these symptoms. The study also found that anxiety and trauma symptoms made things worse for many survivors. These mental health issues are common after a serious illness in the hospital.
The team suggests that doctors should routinely check for sadness and worry when patients return home. Finding these problems early helps doctors plan better support. However, this study only shows a connection, not a cause. More research is needed to fully understand how these feelings affect recovery.
Limitations include looking at data before the main study started. This means we cannot say for sure that the mental health caused the lower scores. Still, the findings support checking on mental health during follow-up visits for all ICU survivors.