Literature DB >> 19527919

Negotiating 'depression' in primary care: a qualitative study.

Susan McPherson1, David Armstrong.   

Abstract

Psychiatry has provided primary care physicians with tools for recognising and labelling mild, moderate or severe 'depression'. General practitioners (GPs) in the UK have been guided to manage depression within primary care and to prescribe anti-depressants as a first-line treatment. The present study aimed to examine how GPs would construct 'depression' when asked to talk about those anomalous patients for whom the medical frontline treatment did not appear to be effective. Twenty purposively selected GPs were asked in an interview to talk about their experience and management of patients with depression who did not respond to anti-depressants. GPs initially struggled to identify a group, but then began to construct a category of person with a pre-medicalised status characterised by various deviant features such as unpleasant characters and personalities, manipulative tendencies, people with entrenched social problems unable to fit in with other people and relate to people normally. GPs also responded in non-medical ways including feeling unsympathetic, breaking confidentiality and prescribing social interventions. In effect, in the absence of an effective medical treatment, depression appeared to become demedicalised. The implications of this process are discussed in relation to patients' subsequent access or lack of access to services and the way in which these findings highlight the processes by which medicine frames disease.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19527919     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.05.032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  9 in total

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Authors:  Elizabeth Bromley; Gail Fox Adams; John S Brekke
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2.  How family physicians address diagnosis and management of depression in palliative care patients.

Authors:  Franca Warmenhoven; Eric van Rijswijk; Elise van Hoogstraten; Karel van Spaendonck; Peter Lucassen; Judith Prins; Kris Vissers; Chris van Weel
Journal:  Ann Fam Med       Date:  2012 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 5.166

3.  Probing for depression and finding diabetes: a mixed-methods analysis of depression interviews with adults treated for type 2 diabetes.

Authors:  Molly L Tanenbaum; Marilyn D Ritholz; Deborah H Binko; Rachel N Baek; M S Erica Shreck; Jeffrey S Gonzalez
Journal:  J Affect Disord       Date:  2013-02-27       Impact factor: 4.839

4.  Pragmatic randomized controlled trial of long-term psychoanalytic psychotherapy for treatment-resistant depression: the Tavistock Adult Depression Study (TADS).

Authors:  Peter Fonagy; Felicitas Rost; Jo-Anne Carlyle; Susan McPherson; Rachel Thomas; R M Pasco Fearon; David Goldberg; David Taylor
Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2015-10       Impact factor: 49.548

5.  The negotiation of the sick role: general practitioners' classification of patients with medically unexplained symptoms.

Authors:  Nanna Mik-Meyer; Anne Roelsgaard Obling
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2012-03-05

6.  Tavistock Adult Depression Study (TADS): a randomised controlled trial of psychoanalytic psychotherapy for treatment-resistant/treatment-refractory forms of depression.

Authors:  David Taylor; Jo-anne Carlyle; Susan McPherson; Felicitas Rost; Rachel Thomas; Peter Fonagy
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2012-06-11       Impact factor: 3.630

7.  Once is rarely enough: can social prescribing facilitate adherence to non-clinical community and voluntary sector health services? Empirical evidence from Germany.

Authors:  Veronika Golubinski; Eva-Maria Wild; Vera Winter; Jonas Schreyögg
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2020-11-30       Impact factor: 3.295

8.  Facilitating professional liaison in collaborative care for depression in UK primary care; a qualitative study utilising normalisation process theory.

Authors:  Nia Coupe; Emma Anderson; Linda Gask; Paul Sykes; David A Richards; Carolyn Chew-Graham
Journal:  BMC Fam Pract       Date:  2014-05-01       Impact factor: 2.497

9.  Barriers and facilitators to GP-patient communication about emotional concerns in UK primary care: a systematic review.

Authors:  Daisy Parker; Richard Byng; Chris Dickens; Debbie Kinsey; Rose McCabe
Journal:  Fam Pract       Date:  2020-09-05       Impact factor: 2.267

  9 in total

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