A vast landscape featuring a calm body of water with distant mountains under a clear, gradient sky transitioning from light pink near the horizon to deep blue at the top.
Family visitors, including a young boy and a woman, are smiling and holding hands with an elderly man in a hospital bed, sharing a joyful moment.
Cover of ICU Diary for Families, a purple medical journal for reflections, notes, and healing, authored by Nicole Cromwell.

ICU Diary for Families

An Interactive Journal for Reflections, Medical Notes, and Healing Together

In the uncertainty of the ICU, this journal helps you keep track, find your voice, and care for yourself too.

The ICU is a world of beeping machines, unfamiliar terms, and sleepless nights. Whether you’re a loved one at the bedside or a patient in recovery, the days blur—and important moments, questions, and emotions get lost.

The ICU Diary for Families is a powerful, research-backed tool designed to help you process, record, and heal during and after a critical care experience.

Why Keep an ICU Diary?

Backed by science and rooted in compassion, the ICU Diary is more than just a journal—it’s a therapeutic tool created by former critical care nurse Nicole Cromwell. Thoughtfully designed to support families and caregivers through the emotional, medical, and mental strain of an ICU stay, it offers space to reflect, track, and begin healing. Whether you're by the bedside or processing what happened afterward, this journal helps bring clarity to the chaos.

A large review of studies found that ICU diaries reduced the risk of PTSD in patients by more than 25%

(Source: PubMed)

An elderly couple are hugging each other in a bright living room

Studies have shown that ICU diaries can: 

Reduce the risk of PTSD and false memories

Many patients experience delusions or memory gaps due to illness, sedation and trauma. Documenting daily events helps fill in the blanks and ease psychological distress (Nassar Jr. et al., 2024). 


Support caregivers facing PICS-F 

Family members can develop post-intensive care syndrome-family (PICS-F), experiencing grief, anxiety, and depression. Journaling helps you process events, reduce stress, and regain control.

A woman with glasses lying in a hospital bed, connected to oxygen, in a medical room with cabinets, a sink, and medical equipment.

Bridge the recovery gap 

As patients heal, diaries become powerful tools that connect them to what happened—restoring a sense of time and helping them understand their journey. Ease emotional overwhelm and increase feelings of control. 


Improve patient–family connection 

Reading the thoughts, fears, and love expressed by caregivers helps patients see the experience through their loved one’s eyes—deepening empathy and emotional healing. 

Post-ICU Syndrome is real. This journal helps you fight it.

Post-Intensive Care Syndrome (PICS) affects up to 50% of ICU survivors and many family members.

(Source: SCCM PICS Overview

Symptoms include: 

  • Memory and cognitive issues 

  • Difficulty concentrating or problem-solving 

  • PTSD, depression, anxiety, and grief 

  • Fatigue, insomnia, and muscle weakness 

An ICU diary can be one of the first, most meaningful tools in the long road to recovery. It’s more than a journal—it’s a lifeline. 

About the Author

Nicole Cromwell is a critical care nurse with over 25 years of ICU experience. After witnessing how overwhelming critical care can be for families, she created the ICU Diary to offer comfort, clarity, and a path to healing.

Now a full-time artist, Nicole creates work that brings peace and emotional support to others. Her shift from nursing to art was a natural evolution—rooted in the same passion for care, healing, and connection. The ICU Diary combines her clinical insight and creative expression to support families through life’s most difficult moments.

A woman with dark curly hair wearing a pink blazer, white top, and cream-colored pants, sitting on a small white chair against a plain light-colored background, smiling at the camera.

"I created this journal so that families wouldn’t feel as lost as I often saw them become. The act of writing can ground us, calm us, and remind us that we’re not powerless." — Nicole

An elderly person in a hospital bed hugging a young girl, both facing a window with sheer curtains.

A Journal Designed for the ICU 

Inside this ICU patient diary template, you’ll find: 

Daily Event Tracker  - Log vital updates, medical decisions, and meaningful moments—all in one place. 

Medical Notes & Questions - Jot down questions for the care team and document their answers for clarity and advocacy. 

Emotional Reflection Pages - A safe space to express your thoughts, fears, hopes, and gratitudes—writing is proven to reduce anxiety and support healing. 

Messages for Your Loved One - Share words of encouragement, stories, or gentle reminders. These notes can bring comfort during and after their ICU stay. 

Patient Reflections - If the patient is awake, they can record their own thoughts—creating a collaborative memory of the experience. 

Support Resources - Gain access to trauma-informed guidance, tips on coping with post ICU syndrome, and recommended next steps. 

Getting to Know Me Page - Share your loved one’s interests, nickname, or favourite music with the care team—adding humanity to their care. 

Three people holding hands in a circle outdoors, showing unity and support.

“Every person should have a copy of this book. The author is a nurse that witnessed people struggling with the process of having a loved one in intensive care. I gifted my copy to a friend that was overwhelmed with a family member in ICU. She said it was an unbelievable help to their family.”

- Amazon review

“As a nurse with 14 years experience in ICUs, I wholeheartedly endorse this thoughtful offering made for the tough times. The ICU Diary for Families not only supports patients and their families through their hospitalization and Post ICU Syndrome, it also helps the nurses who are caring for them. The diary decreases the workload of the ICU RN by providing visitors direction on how to organize their questions, appoint a family spokesperson, navigate multidisciplinary services and more. All of this information is presented in a way designed to help family members ground themselves and work with their emotions.”

- Sarah D, Integrative Nurse Coach

Cover page of an ICU diary booklet titled "ICU Diary for Families" with a blurred hospital scene in the background showing healthcare professionals and a patient holding hands. The booklet includes sections for daily updates, reflections, and medical notes.

Recovery Doesn’t End at Discharge

Many ICU survivors struggle to process their experience afterward. Families, too, are left grappling with what happened. That’s why this journal includes an “After the ICU” section—to help guide both patients and caregivers through reflection and healing in the weeks and months that follow.

A pilot study indicated that 79% of family members who used ICU diaries reported mental health benefits, such as stress relief and improved communication. (Source: Sage Journals)

Order your ICU Diary and provide the comfort, clarity, and connection your family needs.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • We get it—ICU days are long, exhausting, and emotional. That’s why this journal is designed to be simple and supportive. Even one or two quick notes a day—like an update, a question for the care team, or a moment of gratitude—can make a big difference later. Many families say the act of writing helped them feel more grounded and less alone.

  • You don’t need to be a writer. The ICU Diary includes prompts and simple guided sections to help you get started. You can jot down anything: updates, questions, thoughts, or even one-word entries. There’s no wrong way to use it—it’s a tool, not a test.

  • Not at all. Many families use the diary after discharge to make sense of what happened and support recovery. The “After the ICU” section is designed for that exact purpose—because healing doesn’t end when your loved one leaves the hospital.

  • You could—but this isn’t just a blank journal. The ICU Diary was created by a critical care nurse and includes templates for tracking medical updates, prompts for emotional processing, helpful questions to ask care providers, and information about Post-Intensive Care Syndrome (PICS). It’s designed specifically for ICU patients and their families.

  • Post-Intensive Care Syndrome (PICS) refers to the physical, cognitive, and emotional symptoms that can affect ICU survivors after discharge. This may include memory loss, depression, anxiety, fatigue, muscle weakness, and difficulty sleeping. PICS-F refers to similar symptoms experienced by family members. The ICU Diary is one way to support healing and reflection as part of the recovery process.

  • Studies have shown that ICU diaries can reduce the risk of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) by helping patients and families reconstruct the ICU experience in a calm, truthful way. Writing things down fills in memory gaps, reduces confusion, and allows people to process difficult emotions over time.

  • Yes—we offer bulk pricing for hospitals, ICUs, palliative care teams, nonprofit organizations, and chaplaincy programs. This makes it easier to provide ICU Diaries as part of patient and family support kits.

Trusted Resources for Continued Support 

Explore these hand-picked tools and support networks.

Read more about the research behind Post Intensive Care Syndrome

Post ICU logo

PostICU.org – A comprehensive guide to understanding and navigating the recovery process after an ICU stay. This resource offers valuable insights into physical, emotional, and psychological healing for both patients and caregivers.


ICU Delirium Logo

ICUDelirium.org – An essential resource for learning about ICU delirium and its effects on cognitive function. Gain tools and strategies to recognize, manage, and support recovery from this often-overlooked challenge in critical care.


Caring Bridge Logo

CaringBridge.org – A free platform that helps you stay connected with family and friends during difficult times. Share updates, receive messages of support, and build a community of encouragement and care around your loved one.

Cover page of a lavender ICU Diary for Families, an interactive journal for reflections, medical notes, and healing, written by Nicole Cromwell.

Ready to Begin?

Whether you're a family member, a nurse, or a hospital administrator, the ICU Diary offers a simple but powerful way to support emotional recovery and improve communication. 

Inquire about bulk pricing