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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 7/2020

01-07-2020 | Suicide | Original Research: Qualitative Research

The Importance of “Being There”: a Qualitative Study of What Veterans with Depression Want in Social Support

Authors: Alan R. Teo, MD, MS, Heather E. Marsh, MA, Sarah S. Ono, PhD, Christina Nicolaidis, MD, MPH, Somnath Saha, MD, MPH, Steven K. Dobscha, MD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 7/2020

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Abstract

Background

Social connectedness exerts strong influences on health, including major depression and suicide. A major component of social connectedness is having individual relationships with close supports, romantic partners, and other trusted members of one’s social network.

Objective

The objective of this study was to understand how individuals’ relationships with close supports might be leveraged to improve outcomes for primary care patients with depression and at risk for suicide.

Design

In this qualitative study, we used a semi-structured interview guide to probe patient experiences, views, and preferences related to social support.

Participants

We conducted interviews with 30 primary care patients at a Veterans Health Administration (VA) medical center who had symptoms of major depression and a close support.

Approach

Thematic analysis of qualitative interview data examined close supports’ impact on patients. We iteratively developed a codebook, used output from codes to sort data into themes, and selected quotations that exemplified themes for inclusion in this manuscript.

Key Results

“Being there” as an important quality of close supports emerged as a key concept. “Being there” was defined in three ways: physical proximity, frequent or responsive contact, or perceived availability. Close supports who were effective at “being there” possessed skills in intuitively sensing the patient’s emotional state and communicating indirectly about depression. Three major barriers to involving close supports in depression care were concerns of overburdening the close support, a perception that awareness of the patient’s depression would make the close support unnecessarily worried, and a desire and preference among patients to handle depression on their own.

Conclusions

“Being there” represents a novel, patient-generated way to conceptualize and talk about social support. Suicide prevention initiatives such as population-level communication campaigns might be improved by incorporating language used by patients and addressing attitudinal barriers to allowing help and involvement of close supports.
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Metadata
Title
The Importance of “Being There”: a Qualitative Study of What Veterans with Depression Want in Social Support
Authors
Alan R. Teo, MD, MS
Heather E. Marsh, MA
Sarah S. Ono, PhD
Christina Nicolaidis, MD, MPH
Somnath Saha, MD, MPH
Steven K. Dobscha, MD
Publication date
01-07-2020
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 7/2020
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-020-05692-7

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