Engelsk titel: Depression: diagnosis and suffering as process
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Författare:
Petersen, Anders
;
Madsen, Ole Jacob
Email: apt@socsci.aau.dk
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 35
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 17030112
Sammanfattning
The high rates of depression – as well as the widespread diagnosis of depression – are both controversial
and contested in contemporary late-modern society. Issues of flawed definition have
been voiced to account for the bourgeoning rates of depression and the diagnosis has been
subject to criticism of medicalization and pharmaceuticalization. Others have stated that the actualization
of depression is to be seen in light of societal and structural transformations. Be that
as it may, depression is affecting more and more people and the diagnosis is prevalent. In this
context, a more nuanced understanding of how people relate to, experience and ascribe meaning
to their suffering as depression and being diagnosed as such is needed. This article draws
on qualitative interviews from Denmark and Norway to explore lay accounts of depression in
contemporary late-modern society. The findings reveal that lay accounts of suffering, including
living with the diagnosis of depression is a dynamic process, meaning that people vacillate in and
out of various perspectives of suffering and categorization to make it fit their specific life situation
and prospects of the future. In this article we thus highlight the perspectives of thoroughly
analyzing suffering and the diagnostic experience by applying the overall concept of process,
which takes on different meanings in the course of the analysis.