Healthcare Area, Fondazione ISTUD, Baveno, Italy
Neuroscience Department, ASST Fatebenefratelli Sacco, Milano, Italy.
BMJ Open. 2022 Oct 10;12(10):e052744. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-052744.
This research aimed to investigate the experience of major depression by integrating the perspectives of patients, caregivers and healthcare providers through narrative-based medicine (NBM) to provide new insights to improve care relationships.
The research was conducted in 2019 and involved five Italian psychiatric centres and targeted adult patients, their caregivers and healthcare providers to address data source triangulation. A sociodemographic survey and a narrative plot, based on Natural Semantic Metalanguage were collected. Narratives were analysed through NBM classifications, NVivo software and interpretative coding.
Thirty-six patients with a diagnosis of major depression, 27 caregivers and 33 healthcare providers participated in the research.
Among the 96 collected narratives, 'lonely' was the word patients used most frequently, while 'sad' and 'lifeless' were used most respectively by caregivers and healthcare providers. A positive care relationship was crucial for 84% of patients in relation to their care pathway, and nature (36%) and the arts (28%) were the most frequent resources. Caregivers expressed feelings of powerlessness and inadequacy, and 21% of them reported a declining social life while providing care to a loved one with depression. Thirty-one percent of mental health professionals experienced difficulties in their first encounter with patients; however, their emotions progressively moved towards trust and satisfaction. Furthermore, 89% of patients and healthcare providers and 58% of caregivers evaluated writing the narrative to be a positive experience.
Findings suggested the possible role for language in understanding major depression, thereby improving care relationships between patients and physicians. Care pathways might also be more attentive to caregivers, to reduce their risk of burnout. Finally, narrative medicine could be integrated with the care pathway as an additional space of expression, dialogue, reflection and development of empathy.
本研究旨在通过叙事医学(NBM)整合患者、护理人员和医疗保健提供者的观点,来研究重度抑郁症患者的体验,为改善医患关系提供新的见解。
该研究于 2019 年进行,涉及意大利的五家精神病中心,针对成年患者、他们的护理人员和医疗保健提供者,以实现数据来源的三角测量。收集了社会人口统计学调查和基于自然语义元语言的叙事情节。通过 NBM 分类、NVivo 软件和解释性编码对叙事进行分析。
36 名被诊断为重度抑郁症的患者、27 名护理人员和 33 名医疗保健提供者参与了这项研究。
在收集的 96 篇叙述中,患者最常使用的词是“孤独”,而护理人员和医疗保健提供者最常使用的词分别是“悲伤”和“毫无生气”。积极的护理关系对 84%的患者的护理路径至关重要,而自然(36%)和艺术(28%)是最常见的资源。护理人员表达了无力和不足的感觉,其中 21%的人在照顾患有抑郁症的亲人时报告社交生活质量下降。31%的精神卫生专业人员在与患者的首次接触中遇到困难;然而,他们的情绪逐渐转变为信任和满意。此外,89%的患者和医疗保健提供者以及 58%的护理人员认为撰写叙述是一种积极的体验。
研究结果表明,语言在理解重度抑郁症方面可能发挥作用,从而改善患者与医生之间的护理关系。护理路径也可能更加关注护理人员,以降低他们倦怠的风险。最后,叙事医学可以与护理路径相结合,作为表达、对话、反思和培养同理心的附加空间。