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What we talk about when we talk about depression: doctor-patient conversations and treatment decision outcomes.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Efforts to address depression in primary care settings have focused on the introduction of care guidelines emphasising pharmacological treatment. To date, physician adherence remains low. Little is known of the types of information exchange or other negotiations in doctor-patient consultations about depression that influence physician decision making about treatment.
AIM
The study sought to understand conversational influences on physician decision making about treatment for depression.
DESIGN
A secondary analysis of consultation data collected in other studies. Using a maximum variation sampling strategy, 30 transcripts of primary care consultations about distress or depression were selected from datasets collected in three countries. Transcripts were analysed to discover factors associated with prescription of medication.
METHOD
The study employed two qualitative analysis strategies: a micro-analysis approach, which examines how conversation partners shape the dialogue towards pragmatic goals; and a narrative analysis approach of the problem presentation.
RESULTS
Patients communicated their conceptual representations of distress at the outset of each consultation. Concepts of depression were communicated through the narrative form of the problem presentation. Three types of narratives were identified: those emphasising symptoms, those emphasising life situations, and mixed narratives. Physician decision making regarding medication treatment was strongly associated with the form of the patient's narrative. Physicians made few efforts to persuade patients to accept biomedical attributions or treatments.
CONCLUSION
Results of the study provide insight into why adherence to depression guidelines remains low. Data indicate that patient agendas drive the 'action' in consultations about depression. Physicians appear to be guided by common-sense decision-making algorithms emphasising patients' views and preferences.

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  • Authors

    Karasz A, Dowrick C, Byng R, Buszewicz M, Ferri L, Olde Hartman TC, van Dulmen S, van Weel-Baumgarten E, Reeve J

    Institution

    World Trade Center Environmental Health Center, Bellevue Hospital, New York, NY, USA. alison.karasz@einstein.yu.edu

    Source

    The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners 62:594 2012 Jan pg e55-63

    MeSH

    Antidepressive Agents
    Communication
    Decision Making
    Delivery of Health Care
    Depressive Disorder
    Humans
    Medical History Taking
    Patient Acceptance of Health Care
    Physician-Patient Relations
    Treatment Outcome

    Pub Type(s)

    Journal Article
    Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

    Language

    eng

    PubMed ID

    22520683