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Research ArticleOriginal Research

Conceptual Models of Treatment in Depressed Hispanic Patients

Alison Karasz and Liza Watkins
The Annals of Family Medicine November 2006, 4 (6) 527-533; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.579
Alison Karasz
PhD
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Liza Watkins
MA
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  • More talk, less action
    Christopher F Dowrick
    Published on: 08 December 2006
  • Qualitative research provides the color in our guidelines
    Patricia Adam
    Published on: 08 December 2006
  • Published on: (8 December 2006)
    Page navigation anchor for More talk, less action
    More talk, less action
    • Christopher F Dowrick, Liverpool, UK

    Karasz and Watkins describe how Hispanic patients value the advice and guidance given by their doctors, over and above any specific actions they perform with regard to prescribing or referral. This is important. Primary health care is increasingly becoming a technological discipline, and both doctors and patients benefits in many ways as a result. But we should not forget - or devalue - the instrinsic worth of the clini...

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    Karasz and Watkins describe how Hispanic patients value the advice and guidance given by their doctors, over and above any specific actions they perform with regard to prescribing or referral. This is important. Primary health care is increasingly becoming a technological discipline, and both doctors and patients benefits in many ways as a result. But we should not forget - or devalue - the instrinsic worth of the clinical encounter itself.

    What we try to do in our encounters with patients whom we think may be depressed, is to help them find some meaning and purpose out of seemingly undifferentiated suffering and distress (1). This is perhaps the essence of healing, a word which has fallen into disuse and disrepute in modern medicine. At the heart of the process lie two assumptions: that the emergence of meaning, order or form is therapeutic in itself, particularly for people who are feeling lost, alone, frightened or misunderstood (2); and that such emergence is most effective if it is mutual, if understanding of problems and their solutions are negotiated and agreed by both sides.

    I think that, as primary care physicians, we often fail to recognise our own ability to help our distressed patients generate new meanings. It is good to find evidence that our patients do value what we say to them, not just what we do.

    (1) Dowrick C. Beyond Depression. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2004.

    (2) Gask L, Rogers A, Oliver D, May C, Roland M. Qualitative study of patients' perceptions of the quality of care in general practice. Br J Gen Pract 2003;53:278-83

    Competing interests:   None declared

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    Competing Interests: None declared.
  • Published on: (8 December 2006)
    Page navigation anchor for Qualitative research provides the color in our guidelines
    Qualitative research provides the color in our guidelines
    • Patricia Adam, Minneapolis, MN

    Qualitative research provides the color in the black and white world of guidelines. We are all aware of the guidelines recommending agressive medical management of depression, but are at a loss when our patients aren't partners in that management. Dr.s Karasz and Watkins careful work validates what many of us sense, that connecting with our patients by simply listening and giving advice, may be an important step in cem...

    Show More

    Qualitative research provides the color in the black and white world of guidelines. We are all aware of the guidelines recommending agressive medical management of depression, but are at a loss when our patients aren't partners in that management. Dr.s Karasz and Watkins careful work validates what many of us sense, that connecting with our patients by simply listening and giving advice, may be an important step in cementing that therapeutic relationship.

    I'd like to see this area of research expand. What about those who did not find physicians helpful? What underlies their perception that we cannot help them? By exploring these barriers and addressing them, may we improve depression care? How do we translate that knowledge into practice? As always, in research, the more questions we explore, the more questions we raise.

    Competing interests:   None declared

    Show Less
    Competing Interests: None declared.
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The Annals of Family Medicine: 4 (6)
The Annals of Family Medicine: 4 (6)
Vol. 4, Issue 6
1 Nov 2006
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Conceptual Models of Treatment in Depressed Hispanic Patients
Alison Karasz, Liza Watkins
The Annals of Family Medicine Nov 2006, 4 (6) 527-533; DOI: 10.1370/afm.579

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Conceptual Models of Treatment in Depressed Hispanic Patients
Alison Karasz, Liza Watkins
The Annals of Family Medicine Nov 2006, 4 (6) 527-533; DOI: 10.1370/afm.579
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