| Literature DB >> 34545986 |
Georgia Tanith Herring1, Maria Elizabeth Loades1,2, Nina Higson-Sweeney1, Emily Hards1, Shirley Reynolds3, Nick Midgley4,5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Fatigue is a common and debilitating symptom of major depressive disorder (MDD). Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is a recommended psychological treatment for adolescents with moderate to severe depression. This study explored the experience of CBT in fatigued adolescents with MDD.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; cognitive behavioural therapy; depression; fatigue; major depressive disorder
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34545986 PMCID: PMC9292929 DOI: 10.1111/papt.12365
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Psychother ISSN: 1476-0835 Impact factor: 3.966
Participant characteristics of adolescents assigned to the CBT treatment arm and who scored clinical threshold fatigue on the KSADS at baseline
| Pseudonym | Gender | Age | Ethnicity | Therapy attendance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tia | Female | 13 | White British | Non‐completer |
| Ella | Female | 16 | White and Black African | Non‐completer |
| Amira | Female | 17 | Bangladeshi | Completer |
| Rachel | Female | 15 | Other Black background | Completer |
| Mia | Female | 16 | White British | Completer |
| Peyton | Female | 16 | White and Black Caribbean | Non‐completer |
| Jess | Female | 17 | White British | Non‐completer |
| Olivia | Female | 17 | Bangladeshi | Completer |
| Phoebe | Female | 14 | White British | Completer |
| Katie | Female | 17 | Other mixed background | Completer |
| Milly | Female | 15 | White British | Completer |
| Anya | Female | 17 | Other White background | Non‐completer |
| Mike | Male | 18 | White British | Non‐completer |
| Ben | Male | 14 | White British | Completer |
| Harry | Male | 17 | Other White background | Completer |
| Finn | Male | 14 | White and Asian | Non‐completer |
| Rob | Male | 16 | White British | Completer |
| Taylor | Male | 16 | Other Asian background | Completer |
Stages of framework analysis which were conducted in this secondary data analysis
| Stage of analysis | How the stage was implemented | Persons involved in stage of analysis |
|---|---|---|
| Data Familiarization |
Transcripts read and re‐read Fatigue terms ‘tired, energy, worn out, bothered and fatigue(ed)’, were searched, ensuring relevant data were not missed Relevant sections of transcripts were exported into Microsoft Excel |
GH conducted this for all transcripts KS and JM repeated this separately on two transcripts and GH compared this |
| Coding |
Codes were developed and refined After receiving feedback, codes that did not accurately reflect the data were amended |
GH developed initial codes KS, JM and GH discussed initial codes via a video meeting The codes were refined by GH NH‐S reviewed 50% of the coded data |
| Developing an analytical framework |
Refined codes were grouped into categories which represented the coded data Saturation was deemed to be achieved: no new concepts emerged from the data that were not represented by an existing category (Suter, | GH developed the analytical framework |
| Applying the analytical framework |
Data were indexed by category using the sort and filter tool in Excel Each category yielded a column of related data and cases related to the category could be identified by row Feedback ensured the categories encompassed the coded data |
GH applied the analytical framework NH‐S reviewed the first five rows of coded data assigned to each category |
| Charting the data |
Data from each category and each participant were summarized Charting refined data into sizeable chunks and enabled connections and patterns to be identified | GH charted the data |
| Data Interpretation |
Connections between categories were identified Priori concepts or concepts that emerged from the data were explored Themes were developed using a spreadsheet where illustrative quotes from related categories were allocated by column |
GH developed initial themes GH discussed initial themes with NH‐S, JM and KS Themes were shared with ML and EH for their input |
Figure 1Thematic diagram illustrating themes and sub‐themes.