Anda belum login :: 23 Nov 2024 03:59 WIB
Home
|
Logon
Hidden
»
Administration
»
Collection Detail
Detail
Negotiating 'Depression' in Primary Care: A Qualitative Study
Oleh:
McPherson, Susan
;
Armstrong, David
Jenis:
Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi:
Social Science & Medicine (www.elsevier.com/locate/sosscimed) vol. 69 no. 8 (Oct. 2009)
,
page 1137-1143.
Topik:
UK
;
Depression
;
Labelling
;
Treatment Resistant Depression
;
Medicalisation
;
Primary Care
;
Qualitative Research
;
General Practitioners (GP)
Ketersediaan
Perpustakaan Pusat (Semanggi)
Nomor Panggil:
SS53
Non-tandon:
1 (dapat dipinjam: 0)
Tandon:
tidak ada
Lihat Detail Induk
Isi artikel
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.
Opini Anda
Klik untuk menuliskan opini Anda tentang koleksi ini!
Kembali
Process time: 0.015625 second(s)