The experience of having a severe disease such as major depression affects all aspects of the individual's life, including family, work, and social functioning. Therefore, the aim of this study was to describe, from a salutogenic approach, women's conceptions of coping with major depression in daily life with the help of professional and lay support. Thirteen women, previously hospitalized for major depression, were included in the study. The women were selected by strategic sampling, and data were analyzed by application of a phenomenographic approach. Four descriptive categories emerged: Self-Healing, Managing, Receiving Social Support, and Finding Meaning. While working their way out of the depression, the women needed to undergo a process of transition, involving both a cognitive and an emotional understanding, which they subsequently translated into health-related actions. The task of psychiatric mental health nurses is to provide care that empowers patients. Future nursing research should explore the circumstances that empower these women to start the transition process, as this process appears to be vital for recovery from major depression.
Major depression is a common illness, with a lifetime prevalence rate of 10-13% for men and 21-24% for women. The experience of having a serious illness such as major depression affects the individual's quality of life and requires significant adaptation in order to cope. The aim of this study was to explore sense of coherence and social support in patients treated for a first episode of major depression in a 1-year follow up. The study design was prospective and longitudinal. A total of 24 patients, aged 18 years or over, with a first episode of major depression were included. Semi-structured interviews and self-assessment questionnaires were used at baseline as well as in a 1-year follow up in order to measure the level of severity of the depression, social support, and sense of coherence. The result showed that 71% of the patients had recovered at follow up. The sense of coherence scores were low at baseline, although the patients who recovered increased their sense of coherence scores significantly. Another factor of importance for recovery was a significant increase in social support. Social support is an important cornerstone in the restoration of a person's sense of coherence. It can be used in interventions that include the patient's family or close social network in combination with support to assist the patient to view his/her situation as comprehensible, manageable, and meaningful, thereby promoting or improving health. Mental health nurses are in a key position to identify patients' strengths and weaknesses so that the support and interventions provided can be tailored to meet the needs of each patient.
The aim of this study was to characterize and compare patients with major depression and healthy volunteers concerning stressful negative life events, social support and social network occurring during a 12-month period. Forty outpatients who fulfilled DSM-IV criteria for major depression and 19 healthy volunteers were included in the study. The results showed no significant differences between the patients and the volunteers concerning the number of independent life events, perceived sufficient persons in the network, the number of family members, having a partner, and perceiving family members as offering the best support. Thus, there were differences in the number of both dependent stressful life events, especially increased arguments with partner and family members, and life events including personal illness. The patient group had experienced a greater number of these events compared with the volunteer group. Comparisons between the two groups revealed differences concerning social support and social network. Fewer patients, especially women, felt they had sufficient social support, had fewer persons in the network, less contact with persons in the network, and fewer confidants compared with the volunteers.
For schizophrenics, the closing down of the old traditional hospital has in many places ended up in a scenario characterized by homelessness, relapse, patients overcrowding acute psychiatric but also somatic hospital wards, increased suicide figures, low living standards — and an increased burden on the family. The beds for schizophrenics have been considerably reduced in many countries. For schizophrenia the critical low number of institution beds — hospital as well as nursing home — seems to be 0.07% of the general population. Schizophrenia in all phases must be treated as the disease it is, not as a social problem.
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