...
首页> 外文期刊>BMC Family Practice >Feeling labeled, judged, lectured, and rejected by family and friends over depression: Cautionary results for primary care clinicians from a multi-centered, qualitative study
【24h】

Feeling labeled, judged, lectured, and rejected by family and friends over depression: Cautionary results for primary care clinicians from a multi-centered, qualitative study

机译:家人和朋友对抑郁症有标签,判断,演讲和拒绝的感觉:来自多中心,定性研究的初级保健临床医生的警告性结果

获取原文
   

获取外文期刊封面封底 >>

       

摘要

Background Family and friends may help patients seek out and engage in depression care. However, patients’ social networks can also undermine depression treatment and recovery. In an effort to improve depression care in primary care settings, we sought to identify, categorize, and alert primary care clinicians to depression-related messages that patients hear from friends and family that patients perceive as unhelpful or detrimental. Methods We conducted 15 focus groups in 3 cities. Participants (n?=?116) with a personal history or knowledge of depression responded to open-ended questions about depression, including self-perceived barriers to care-seeking. Focus group conversations were audio-recorded and analyzed using iterative qualitative analysis. Results Four themes emerged related to negatively-received depression messages delivered by family and friends. Specifically, participants perceived these messages as making them feel labeled, judged, lectured to, and rejected by family and friends when discussing depression. Some participants also expressed their interpretation of their families’ motivations for delivering the messages and described how hearing these messages affected depression care. Conclusions The richness of our results reflects the complexity of communication within depression sufferers’ social networks around this stigmatized issue. To leverage patients’ social support networks effectively in depression care, primary care clinicians should be aware of both the potentially beneficial and detrimental aspects of social support. Specifically, clinicians should consider using open-ended queries into patients’ experiences with discussing depression with family and friends as an initial step in the process. An open-ended approach may avoid future emotional trauma or stigmatization and assist patients in overcoming self-imposed barriers to depression discussion, symptom disclosure, treatment adherence and follow-up care.
机译:背景家人和朋友可能会帮助患者寻找并进行抑郁症治疗。但是,患者的社交网络也会破坏抑郁症的治疗和康复。为了改善初级保健环境中的抑郁症护理,我们试图确定,分类和提醒初级保健临床医生注意患者从朋友和家人那里听到的与抑郁症有关的信息,这些信息被患者认为是无助或有害的。方法我们在3个城市进行了15个焦点小组讨论。具有个人病史或抑郁症知识的参与者(n = 116)回答了有关抑郁症的开放式问题,包括自我理解的寻求障碍。对焦点小组的谈话进行录音并使用迭代定性分析进行分析。结果出现了四个主题,这些主题与家人和朋友传递的负面信息有关。具体来说,参与者认为这些信息使他们在讨论抑郁症时感到被家人和朋友标记,判断,演讲和拒绝。一些参与者还表达了他们对家人传递信息动机的解释,并描述了听到这些信息如何影响抑郁症护理。结论结论我们的研究结果丰富,反映出围绕这一被污名化的问题,抑郁症患者的社交网络中沟通的复杂性。为了有效地利用患者的社会支持网络来进行抑郁症治疗,初级保健临床医生应该意识到社会支持的潜在有益和不利方面。具体来说,临床医生应考虑使用开放式查询来询问患者与家人和朋友讨论抑郁症的经历,这是该过程的第一步。开放式方法可以避免将来出现情绪创伤或污名化,并帮助患者克服自我压抑,讨论,症状披露,治疗依从性和后续护理的障碍。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号