The diagnosis of depression in the clinical context is extremely controversial and is subject to criticism of over-medicalisation and pharmaceuticalisation. Depression can be conceptualised across the entire spectrum of lay and medical belief, from the 'normal' highs and lows of the human condition to its inclusion in the dominant Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders classificatory system, as a form of serious mental illness. In this context, a better understanding of how people describe, experience, negotiate and participate in the process of diagnosis is needed. This article draws on qualitative interviews to explore lay accounts of being diagnosed with depression. The findings reveal that lay accounts of depression vacil...
“You’re too young to be depressed” – a saying I’ve heard far too many times when disclosing my exper...
Background Detection of depression can be difficult in primary care, particularly when associated w...
Abstract The literature indicates that although depression is highly prevalent, it is rarely recogni...
The diagnosis of depression in the clinical context is extremely controversial and is subject to cri...
The diagnosis of depression is defined by psychiatrists, and guidelines for treatment of patients wi...
Depression remains a significant public health issue globally; 121 million people are affected by de...
Background: Detection of depression can be difficult in primary care, particularly when associated w...
The dominant ideology within mental health services and research, sometimes simplistically described...
Clinical depression is a serious illness which leads to persistent low mood, loss of energy and moti...
Originally a psychiatric diagnosis fashioned by Western psychiatry in the 20th Century, depression e...
What is depression? Depression is an illness characterised by a constellation of symp-toms which ult...
'Depression' is one of the most extensively described and debated words in the field of me...
Background: Research into depression in the medically ill has progressed without sufficient attentio...
Introduction A literature review of the evidence regarding aetiology, classification, epidemiology a...
Depression is a common problem, often being recurrent or becoming chronic. It has been stated that p...
“You’re too young to be depressed” – a saying I’ve heard far too many times when disclosing my exper...
Background Detection of depression can be difficult in primary care, particularly when associated w...
Abstract The literature indicates that although depression is highly prevalent, it is rarely recogni...
The diagnosis of depression in the clinical context is extremely controversial and is subject to cri...
The diagnosis of depression is defined by psychiatrists, and guidelines for treatment of patients wi...
Depression remains a significant public health issue globally; 121 million people are affected by de...
Background: Detection of depression can be difficult in primary care, particularly when associated w...
The dominant ideology within mental health services and research, sometimes simplistically described...
Clinical depression is a serious illness which leads to persistent low mood, loss of energy and moti...
Originally a psychiatric diagnosis fashioned by Western psychiatry in the 20th Century, depression e...
What is depression? Depression is an illness characterised by a constellation of symp-toms which ult...
'Depression' is one of the most extensively described and debated words in the field of me...
Background: Research into depression in the medically ill has progressed without sufficient attentio...
Introduction A literature review of the evidence regarding aetiology, classification, epidemiology a...
Depression is a common problem, often being recurrent or becoming chronic. It has been stated that p...
“You’re too young to be depressed” – a saying I’ve heard far too many times when disclosing my exper...
Background Detection of depression can be difficult in primary care, particularly when associated w...
Abstract The literature indicates that although depression is highly prevalent, it is rarely recogni...