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      Toward a cultural adaptation of pharmacotherapy: Latino views of depression and antidepressant therapy.

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          Abstract

          Relative to non-Latino Whites, Latinos in the United States with major depressive disorder (MDD) show low engagement in antidepressant therapy, whether engagement is defined as pharmacotherapy access, medication initiation, pill-taking, or treatment retention. One potential reason for this disparity in depression care is the low cultural congruence of pharmacotherapy for this population. To examine Latinos' views of depression and antidepressant therapy, we conducted qualitative interviews with 30 Latino outpatients initiating antidepressants prior to their first treatment visit using the semistructured Treatment Adherence and Retention Questionnaire. These baseline interviews were randomly selected from data collected for a randomized controlled trial testing a novel intervention to enhance engagement by depressed Latino outpatients. Participant narratives were analyzed using open coding and the iterative analytical approach derived from grounded theory. Patient views about depression addressed stigmatizing views held by others in their social circle. Most participants directly refuted these views by providing alternate explanations to depression experiences. Antidepressant therapy narratives also revealed marked stigmatization, but participants tended not to refute these views. Instead, patients expressed concerns about antidepressants and showed marked ambivalence about seeking psychiatric care. Participants, however, did suggest ways in which clinicians and patients might collaborate to address their concerns about antidepressants. Some cultural views, such as concerns about addiction to or dependence on medication, may be negotiable barriers to treatment. Prescribing clinicians should address cultural views and concerns in order to improve Latino engagement in antidepressant therapy.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Transcult Psychiatry
          Transcultural psychiatry
          1461-7471
          1363-4615
          Apr 2015
          : 52
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] University of Southern California.
          [2 ] Columbia University School of Social WorkNew York State Psychiatric Institute.
          [3 ] University of Central Florida.
          [4 ] Columbia University Medical Center.
          [5 ] New York State Psychiatric Institute.
          [6 ] Rutgers University.
          [7 ] Columbia University Medical CenterNew York State Psychiatric Institute rlewis@nyspi.columbia.edu.
          Article
          1363461515574159
          10.1177/1363461515574159
          25736422
          39427d43-bf07-4579-8985-fc376852449a
          © The Author(s) 2015 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav.
          History

          Latino,antidepressant pharmacotherapy,cultural adaptation,engagement,stigma

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