"Medication career" or "Moral career"? The two sides of managing antidepressants: A meta-ethnography of patients' experience of antidepressants

被引:282
作者
Malpass, Alice [1 ]
Shaw, Alison [1 ]
Sharp, Debbie [1 ]
Walter, Fiona [2 ]
Feder, Gene [1 ]
Ridd, Matthew [1 ]
Kessler, David [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bristol, Acad Unit Primary Hlth Care, Dept Community Based Med, NIHR Natl Sch Primary Care Res, Bristol BS8 2AA, Avon, England
[2] Univ Cambridge, NIHR Natl Sch Primary Care Res Inst Publ Hlth, Gen Practice & Primary Care Res Unit, Cambridge CB2 0SR, England
关键词
UK; Meta-ethnography; Patient experience; Antidepressants; Self-concept; Concordance; Review; QUALITATIVE RESEARCH; ADHERENCE; DEPRESSION; MEDICINES; INVOLVEMENT; WOMENS; HEALTH; HELP;
D O I
10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.09.068
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
The UK National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) Clinical Guidelines recommend routine prescription of antidepressants for moderate to severe depression. While many patients accept a prescription, one in three do not complete treatment. We carried out a meta-ethnography of published qualitative papers since 1990 whose focus is patients' experience of antidepressant use for depression, in order to understand barriers and facilitators to concordance and inform a larger qualitative study investigating antidepressant use over time. A systematic search of five databases was carried out, supported by hand searches of key journals, writing to first authors and examining reference lists. After piloting three critical appraisal tools, a modified version of the CASP (Critical Appraisal Skills Programme) checklist was used to appraise potentially relevant and qualitative papers. We carried out a synthesis using techniques of meta-ethnography involving translation and re-interpretation. Sixteen papers were included in the meta-ethnography. The papers fall into two related groups: (1) Papers whose focus is the decision-making relationship and the ways patients manage their use of antidepressants, and (2) Papers whose focus is antidepressants' effect on self-concept, ideas of stigma and its management. We found that patients' experience of antidepressants is characterised by the decision-making process and the meaning-making process, conceptualised here as the 'medication career' and 'moral career'. Our synthesis indicates ways in which general practitioners (GPs) can facilitate concordant relationships with patients regarding antidepressant use. First, GPs can enhance the potential for shared decision-making by reviewing patients' changing preferences for involvement in decision-making regularly throughout the patient's 'medication career'. Second, if GPs familiarise themselves with the competing demands that patients may experience at each decision-making juncture, they will be better placed to explore their patients' preferences and concerns - i.e. their 'moral career' of medication use. This may lead to valuable discussion of what taking antidepressants means for patients' sense of self and how their treatment decisions may be influenced by a felt sense of stigma. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:154 / 168
页数:15
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