Overview
A new multicenter study highlights an often overlooked burden in intensive care units: the financial strain families face when paying for a loved one’s medical care. Among caregivers of patients in medical ICUs, difficulty paying medical bills was common and was linked to worse psychological well-being and less favorable perceptions of healthcare.
These findings matter because critical illness affects not only the patient, but also the family members who make decisions, provide support, and often manage complex logistics and costs. In the ICU, where treatments are intensive, fast-moving, and expensive, financial stress can add another layer of suffering during an already overwhelming time.
Study Background
The study examined family caregivers of patients admitted to three medical ICUs in the United States. It used baseline data from an ongoing randomized controlled trial, meaning the analysis looked at information collected before any intervention was started.
The caregivers had a mean age of 52.32 years. Most were women, and many were spouses or partners of the patient. This is important because family caregivers in critical care settings frequently serve as surrogate decision-makers, emotional anchors, and practical coordinators of care. When medical bills become difficult to manage, the burden can affect both their mental health and the way they view the healthcare system.
The research focused on two broad areas:
1. Patient-related financial strain, especially difficulty paying for medical care.
2. Caregiver outcomes, including psychological distress and perceptions of healthcare.
What the Researchers Measured
Caregivers completed questionnaires assessing several important domains:
Difficulty paying for patient medical care: how hard it was for the family to cover expenses related to ICU treatment and hospital care.
Posttraumatic stress symptoms: stress reactions such as intrusive thoughts, hypervigilance, and emotional distress related to the patient’s critical illness.
Anxiety symptoms: ongoing worry, tension, and fear.
Depressive symptoms: low mood, loss of interest, hopelessness, or emotional exhaustion.
Medical mistrust: concern that healthcare systems or clinicians may not be fully trustworthy or may not act in the patient’s best interest.
Decisional regret: distress or second-guessing about choices made during the patient’s care.
These measures help capture the broader impact of critical illness on families. ICU care can be emotionally destabilizing, and if financial concerns are added, caregivers may feel even less secure and more overwhelmed.
Key Findings
The results showed that 63.9% of caregivers reported difficulty paying for the patient’s medical care. In other words, more than half of the families in this study experienced financial strain.
Financial difficulty was associated with worse caregiver outcomes in several areas:
Posttraumatic stress symptoms: r = 0.35; p < 0.001; 95% CI, 0.15-0.52
Anxiety symptoms: r = 0.22; p < 0.05; 95% CI, 0.02-0.41
Depressive symptoms: r = 0.27; p < 0.01; 95% CI, 0.07-0.45
Decisional regret: r = 0.30; p < 0.05; 95% CI, 0.03-0.52
Medical mistrust: r = 0.30; p < 0.01; 95% CI, 0.10-0.48
These are positive correlations, meaning that as difficulty paying for care increased, so did psychological distress, regret about decisions, and mistrust of medical care.
The strongest association was with posttraumatic stress symptoms, suggesting that financial strain may be particularly tied to trauma-like reactions in the ICU context. Even though the study cannot prove that financial stress directly causes these symptoms, the relationship is clinically meaningful and consistent with what many caregivers experience: financial stress can intensify fear, uncertainty, and emotional exhaustion.
Why Financial Strain Matters in the ICU
Critical illness is expensive. Even with insurance, families may face out-of-pocket costs such as copayments, deductibles, medications, transportation, parking, meals, lodging, lost work time, and follow-up care. For some caregivers, the patient’s illness can also mean reduced income if they miss work or need to take leave.
This financial burden can affect caregiving in several ways:
It increases stress and reduces emotional resilience.
It may interfere with communication and decision-making.
It can create feelings of guilt, helplessness, or anger.
It may shape how families interpret medical recommendations or the motives of the healthcare team.
It can worsen long-term mental health after ICU hospitalization.
When caregivers are preoccupied with bills, they may have less capacity to absorb complex medical information or participate confidently in shared decision-making. Financial worry can also complicate grieving and recovery if the patient survives but leaves the hospital with ongoing care needs.
Medical Mistrust and Decisional Regret
One especially important finding was the association between financial strain and medical mistrust. Medical mistrust refers to skepticism about the healthcare system, clinicians, or institutions. It may arise from prior experiences, communication problems, perceived inequity, or the feeling that decisions are being made without sufficient attention to the family’s burden.
In critical care, mistrust can have serious consequences. It may reduce openness in conversations, make families less willing to ask questions, and increase conflict around treatment decisions.
Decisional regret was also more common among caregivers facing financial strain. This may happen when families later wonder whether they chose the right treatments, whether the patient would have wanted certain interventions, or whether the costs were worth the outcomes. Because ICU decisions are often made quickly and under pressure, regret can be especially powerful when financial hardship follows.
Psychological Distress in Caregivers
The study found that caregivers who had trouble paying for care also reported more posttraumatic stress, anxiety, and depressive symptoms. This is not surprising, but it is clinically important.
Posttraumatic stress symptoms may occur after witnessing a loved one in life-threatening condition, making urgent decisions, or feeling powerless in the ICU. Anxiety can be fueled by uncertainty about prognosis, treatment, and cost. Depression may develop when stress becomes chronic, support is limited, or the caregiver feels trapped by the situation.
Financial stress can amplify all of these responses. It may also delay help-seeking if caregivers assume that emotional distress is just something they have to endure. Recognizing these symptoms early is essential, because untreated caregiver distress can persist long after discharge and may affect the patient’s recovery as well.
Clinical Implications
The findings suggest that financial screening should be considered part of family-centered ICU care. Just as clinicians routinely ask about pain, symptoms, or decision-making needs, they may also need to ask whether families are struggling to pay for care.
Potential responses include:
Early identification of financial hardship through screening questions.
Referral to social workers, case managers, or financial counselors.
Support with insurance navigation, disability paperwork, and leave-from-work resources.
Clear communication about expected costs when possible.
Attention to emotional distress and referral to mental health support when needed.
These steps will not eliminate the financial burden of critical illness, but they may reduce the sense of isolation and helplessness that families feel. A more supportive approach may also improve trust and help caregivers engage more fully in care decisions.
Broader Public Health Significance
This study also has relevance beyond the ICU. Financial toxicity, the harmful economic impact of medical care, is increasingly recognized across many areas of medicine, including oncology, chronic disease management, and emergency care. The ICU setting adds unique pressures because illness is sudden, severe, and emotionally charged.
From a public health perspective, the results reinforce the need for systems-level solutions. These could include better insurance coverage, easier access to financial assistance, stronger workplace protections for caregivers, and policies that reduce unexpected out-of-pocket costs. Addressing the economic impact of critical illness may improve not only financial stability, but also mental health and trust in healthcare.
Study Limitations
As with any study, there are limitations to keep in mind. This was a cross-sectional analysis, meaning it looked at one point in time. As a result, the study cannot determine cause and effect. It is possible that financial strain contributes to distress, but it is also possible that distressed caregivers perceive financial burden more strongly.
The sample was also drawn from three ICU sites in the United States, so the findings may not apply equally to all hospitals, regions, or healthcare systems. In addition, the study relied on self-reported measures, which are valuable but can be influenced by personal perception and current mood.
Even with these limitations, the consistency of the associations suggests an important and clinically relevant pattern that deserves further research.
Takeaway
Difficulty paying for medical care is common among ICU caregivers and is associated with more severe psychological distress, greater decisional regret, and higher medical mistrust. These findings show that the economic impact of critical illness is not just a financial issue; it is also a mental health and communication issue.
For clinicians, the message is clear: supporting ICU families should include attention to financial burden as well as emotional and medical needs. For health systems, the study underscores the importance of reducing financial toxicity and providing practical support to families during one of the most difficult experiences of their lives.
