A qualitative examination of the experience of 'depression' in hospitalized medically ill patients


Autoria(s): Clarke, David M.; Cook, Kay; Coleman, John; Smith, Graeme C.
Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

<b>Background</b>: Research into depression in the medically ill has progressed without sufficient attention being given to the validity, in this group, of the taxonomic categories. We aimed to describe, using qualitative interviews, the experience of 'being depressed', separating experiences that are unique to depression from experiences that are common to being ill and in hospital. <br /><b>Method</b>: Forty-nine patients hospitalized for medical illness underwent a 30-min interview in which they were asked to 'Describe how you have been unwell and, in particular, how that has made you feel.' From the transcripts, a 'folk' taxonomy was constructed using a phenomenological framework involving four steps: frame elicitation to identify the important themes, componential analysis to systematically cluster the attributes into domains, a comparison of the experiences of patients screening depressed and  not-depressed, and a theoretical analysis comparing the resulting taxonomy with currently used theoretical constructs. <br /><b>Results</b>: Experiences common to all patients were being in hospital, being ill or in pain, adjusting to not being able to do things, and having time to think. In addition, all participants described being depressed, down or sad. Patients who were identified by screening as being depressed described unique experiences of depression, which included 'having to think about things' (a forceful intrusive thinking), 'not being able to sleep', 'having to rely on others', 'being a burden' to others (with associated shame and guilt), feelings of 'not getting better' and 'feeling like giving up'. Theoretical analysis suggested that this experience of depression fitted well with the concept of demoralization described by Jerome Frank. <br /><b>Conclusions</b>: Demoralization, which involves feelings of being unable to cope, helplessness, hopelessness and diminished personal esteem, characterizes much of the depression seen in hospitalized medically ill patients<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30008994

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

S. Karger AG

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30008994/n20060668.pdf

Direitos

2006 S. Karger AG, Basel

Palavras-Chave #depression #demoralization #adjustment reaction #medically ill
Tipo

Journal Article