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

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>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, w...

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Main Authors: Y-Garcia Erik, Duberstein Paul, Paterniti Debora A, Cipri Camille S, Kravitz Richard L, Epstein Ronald M
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-06-01
Series:BMC Family Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2296/13/64
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spelling doaj-1985ca6589be4e0d8faab29fe349998a2020-11-25T03:23:10ZengBMCBMC Family Practice1471-22962012-06-011316410.1186/1471-2296-13-64Feeling labeled, judged, lectured, and rejected by family and friends over depression: Cautionary results for primary care clinicians from a multi-centered, qualitative studyY-Garcia ErikDuberstein PaulPaterniti Debora ACipri Camille SKravitz Richard LEpstein Ronald M<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>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.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>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.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>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.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>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.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2296/13/64depressiondisclosurenormspatient-provider communicationsocial supportqualitative analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Y-Garcia Erik
Duberstein Paul
Paterniti Debora A
Cipri Camille S
Kravitz Richard L
Epstein Ronald M
spellingShingle Y-Garcia Erik
Duberstein Paul
Paterniti Debora A
Cipri Camille S
Kravitz Richard L
Epstein Ronald M
Feeling labeled, judged, lectured, and rejected by family and friends over depression: Cautionary results for primary care clinicians from a multi-centered, qualitative study
BMC Family Practice
depression
disclosure
norms
patient-provider communication
social support
qualitative analysis
author_facet Y-Garcia Erik
Duberstein Paul
Paterniti Debora A
Cipri Camille S
Kravitz Richard L
Epstein Ronald M
author_sort Y-Garcia Erik
title Feeling labeled, judged, lectured, and rejected by family and friends over depression: Cautionary results for primary care clinicians from a multi-centered, qualitative study
title_short Feeling labeled, judged, lectured, and rejected by family and friends over depression: Cautionary results for primary care clinicians from a multi-centered, qualitative study
title_full Feeling labeled, judged, lectured, and rejected by family and friends over depression: Cautionary results for primary care clinicians from a multi-centered, qualitative study
title_fullStr Feeling labeled, judged, lectured, and rejected by family and friends over depression: Cautionary results for primary care clinicians from a multi-centered, qualitative study
title_full_unstemmed Feeling labeled, judged, lectured, and rejected by family and friends over depression: Cautionary results for primary care clinicians from a multi-centered, qualitative study
title_sort feeling labeled, judged, lectured, and rejected by family and friends over depression: cautionary results for primary care clinicians from a multi-centered, qualitative study
publisher BMC
series BMC Family Practice
issn 1471-2296
publishDate 2012-06-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>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.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>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.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>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.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>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.</p>
topic depression
disclosure
norms
patient-provider communication
social support
qualitative analysis
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2296/13/64
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