Discontents surrounding depression are many, and include concerns about a creeping appropriation of everyday kinds of misery; divergent opinions on the diagnostic category(ies); and debates about causes and appropriate treatments. The somewhat mixed fortunes of antidepressants – including concerns about their efficacy, overuse and impacts on personhood – have contributed to a moral ambivalence around antidepressant use for people with mental health issues. Given this, we set out to critically examine how antidepressant users engage in the moral underpinnings of their use, especially how they ascribe legitimacy (or otherwise) to this usage. Using a modified constant comparative approach, we analyzed 107 narrative interviews (32 in UKa, 36 in...
Objective: To explore people's experiences of starting antidepressant treatment.Design: Qualitative ...
Patient perspectives were explored on the meaning and experience of antidepressant use by applying J...
Although there appears to be awidespread consensus that depression is a ubi- quitous human experienc...
Discontents surrounding depression are many, and include concerns about a creeping appropriation of ...
Discontents surrounding depression are many, and include concerns about a creeping appropriation of ...
This article deploys a legitimacy framework to explore how Anglo-Australian and Indian-Australian co...
The macro landscape shaping antidepressant use is marked by uncertain and contested research and vig...
The problem of under-diagnosis and under-treatment of depression has been identified as a major publ...
This book addresses the over-prescribing of antidepressants in people with mostly mild and subthresh...
Although there appears to be a widespread consensus that depression is a ubiquitous human experience...
Although there appears to be a widespread consensus that depression is a ubiquitous human experience...
BACKGROUND: The beliefs of people receiving treatment about the causes of their own mental health pr...
In the 1990s the estimated prevalence of depression was two thousand times higher than in the 1960s ...
Background Starting in the 1960s, a broad-based patients’ rights movement began to question doctors’...
Background Public beliefs about the causes of mental health problems are related to desire for dist...
Objective: To explore people's experiences of starting antidepressant treatment.Design: Qualitative ...
Patient perspectives were explored on the meaning and experience of antidepressant use by applying J...
Although there appears to be awidespread consensus that depression is a ubi- quitous human experienc...
Discontents surrounding depression are many, and include concerns about a creeping appropriation of ...
Discontents surrounding depression are many, and include concerns about a creeping appropriation of ...
This article deploys a legitimacy framework to explore how Anglo-Australian and Indian-Australian co...
The macro landscape shaping antidepressant use is marked by uncertain and contested research and vig...
The problem of under-diagnosis and under-treatment of depression has been identified as a major publ...
This book addresses the over-prescribing of antidepressants in people with mostly mild and subthresh...
Although there appears to be a widespread consensus that depression is a ubiquitous human experience...
Although there appears to be a widespread consensus that depression is a ubiquitous human experience...
BACKGROUND: The beliefs of people receiving treatment about the causes of their own mental health pr...
In the 1990s the estimated prevalence of depression was two thousand times higher than in the 1960s ...
Background Starting in the 1960s, a broad-based patients’ rights movement began to question doctors’...
Background Public beliefs about the causes of mental health problems are related to desire for dist...
Objective: To explore people's experiences of starting antidepressant treatment.Design: Qualitative ...
Patient perspectives were explored on the meaning and experience of antidepressant use by applying J...
Although there appears to be awidespread consensus that depression is a ubi- quitous human experienc...