Speak directly to the patient, and tell them whatever you think is relevant to tell them. Don’t hesitate to tell him all the positive events of the hospitalization but also the difficult events and your feelings.
It could be these events that will interest the patient when he/she returns to a state of normal consciousness in order to take the full measure of what he/she has been through.
Telling him about his possible delusions, hallucinations or even the harmless events that occurred during his hospitalization will allow him/her to better understand the aberrant memories that he may have.
For example: Telling him that he is strangely staring at a stain on the ceiling or telling him that he has been subjected to a lot of noise all day due to construction work may help him better understand the strange memory he has of seeing an animal in his room or of feeling like he is in the hold of a ship!
Feel free to put all the events that happen to the patient into a larger context The patient can tell his or her story: tell what is happening at home (children’s progress at school, passage of the seasons, a family member’s trip, etc.); tell events in the outside world (results of sports events related to the patient’s interests, major news events that the patient will not experience live, political events, etc.): Putting his or her story in context will help him or her to rebuild.