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The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice 18:125-131 (2005)
© 2005 American Board of Family Practice


Family Medicine-World Perspective

Barriers to the Diagnosis and Treatment of Depression in Jordan. A Nationwide Qualitative Study

Laeth S. Nasir, MBBS and Raeda Al-Qutob, MBBS, MPH, DrPH

Department of Family Medicine, University of Nebraska, Omaha (LSN)
Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Jordan Faculty of Medicine, Amman, Jordan (RQ)

Correspondence: Address correspondence to Laeth S. Nasir, MBBS, University of Nebraska Department of Family Medicine, 983075 Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE 68198-3075 (e-mail: lnasir{at}unmc.edu)

Abstract

Background: Depression is one of the most common causes of morbidity in developing countries. It is believed that there are many barriers to diagnosis and treatment in the primary care setting, but little research exists.

Methods: Five focus groups were conducted with the goal of exploring themes related to barriers to the diagnosis and treatment of depression, with a purposeful nationwide sample of 50 primary health care providers working in the public health clinics of the Jordanian Ministry of Health (MOH). Participant comments were transcribed and analyzed by the authors, who agreed on common themes.

Results: Lack of education about depression, lack of availability of appropriate therapies, competing clinical demands, social issues, and the lack of patient acceptance of the diagnosis were felt to be among the most important barriers to the identification, diagnosis, and treatment of patients with depression in this population.

Conclusions: Continuing medical education for providers about depression, provision of counseling services and antidepressant medications at the primary care level, and efforts to destigmatize depression may result in increased rates of recognition and treatment of depression in this population. Systematizing traditional social support behaviors may be effective in reducing the numbers of patients referred for medical care.








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Copyright © 2005 by the American Board of Family Medicine.