Experiencing depression, experiencing the depressed: the separate worlds of patients and doctors
Experiencing depression, experiencing the depressed: the separate worlds of patients and doctors
Using findings from a qualitative study of the management of depression in primary care, this paper explores the ways that doctors and patients conceptualise and respond to depression as a problem in the specific organisational context of primary care. This is done by drawing on the narratives of patients and their general practitioners (GPs). Twenty-seven patients and 10 GPs were recruited from 10 different practices in the Greater Manchester area. Patient accounts from the semi-structured interviews illuminated the background to, and ways in which, people made contact with and experienced, help seeking, consultation and management. While the need for help was pressing and anxiously sought, the overall contact with primary care was found to be of relatively little significance when set against the magnitude of their experienced problems. Our analysis suggests that the perceived nature of primary care provision and whether or not the nature of their problem was perceived to be legitimate influenced expectations. Dealing with depression, from a GP perspective, constitutes work that is shaped and constrained not simply by individual preferred treatment decisions, but by the wider formulation of medical knowledge and practice, and the political organisation of resources and professional interactions in primary care
317-334
Rogers, Anne
cac0b774-b6bf-4e22-bee6-03551d0730c7
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Oliver, Dianne
8e4340eb-d0f5-47be-8fe5-b85151b0a738
June 2001
Rogers, Anne
cac0b774-b6bf-4e22-bee6-03551d0730c7
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Oliver, Dianne
8e4340eb-d0f5-47be-8fe5-b85151b0a738
Rogers, Anne, May, Carl and Oliver, Dianne
(2001)
Experiencing depression, experiencing the depressed: the separate worlds of patients and doctors.
Journal of Mental Health, 10 (3), .
(doi:10.1080/09638230125545).
Abstract
Using findings from a qualitative study of the management of depression in primary care, this paper explores the ways that doctors and patients conceptualise and respond to depression as a problem in the specific organisational context of primary care. This is done by drawing on the narratives of patients and their general practitioners (GPs). Twenty-seven patients and 10 GPs were recruited from 10 different practices in the Greater Manchester area. Patient accounts from the semi-structured interviews illuminated the background to, and ways in which, people made contact with and experienced, help seeking, consultation and management. While the need for help was pressing and anxiously sought, the overall contact with primary care was found to be of relatively little significance when set against the magnitude of their experienced problems. Our analysis suggests that the perceived nature of primary care provision and whether or not the nature of their problem was perceived to be legitimate influenced expectations. Dealing with depression, from a GP perspective, constitutes work that is shaped and constrained not simply by individual preferred treatment decisions, but by the wider formulation of medical knowledge and practice, and the political organisation of resources and professional interactions in primary care
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Published date: June 2001
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Local EPrints ID: 163671
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/163671
PURE UUID: 06331018-6cba-4678-9c20-611c5455b5c4
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Date deposited: 10 Sep 2010 13:40
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:06
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Author:
Anne Rogers
Author:
Carl May
Author:
Dianne Oliver
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