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The meaning of depression: Swedish nurses’ perceptions of depressed inpatients
Author(s) -
LILJA L.,
HELLZÉN M.,
LIND I.,
HELLZÉN O.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of psychiatric and mental health nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.69
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1365-2850
pISSN - 1351-0126
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2850.2006.00946.x
Subject(s) - psychiatry , depression (economics) , feeling , psychological intervention , clinical psychology , medicine , varimax rotation , intervention (counseling) , major depressive episode , psychology , psychometrics , cognition , social psychology , economics , macroeconomics , cronbach's alpha
People suffering from depressive disorder are affected by one of the western world’s largest medical groups of disorders in both psychiatric and general medicine. Drug treatment is usually the first‐line intervention and has been shown to be an effective treatment. Other therapies, including nursing interventions that could be implemented in care, are infrequently used. It is therefore important to understand whether nurses’ perceptions of depressed people could be explained from the medical model by defining the nurses’ view of psychiatric inpatients. Therefore, the aim of this study was, with the clinical picture as the starting point, to investigate the nurses’ view of hospitalized patients with a diagnosis of depression. In this prospective study, 155 nurses’ opinion of depression among depressive inpatients was assessed using a questionnaire based on the Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale. To elucidate the relationship between the variables in the questionnaire, factor analysis rotated by the Varimax method with Kaiser’s normalization was used. The factor analysis identified five factors. The number of variables was reduced from 61 to 34. Based on the factor interpretation, an initial factor structure for the depressive inpatient was defined. The identified factors were interpreted and labelled to create the nurses’ fused ‘picture’ or meaning of the depressed inpatient as an individual who experienced feelings of annihilation , alienation , fatigue , emptiness and affliction , an individual who is disconnected from the whole of temporality.

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