Becoming a patient-illness representations of depression of Anglo-Australian and Sri Lankan patients through the lens of Leventhal's illness representational model

© The Author(s) 2017. Background: Depression is prevalent globally. While the uptake of mental health services is poor in the general community, the lack of service engagement is particularly profound in migrant and refugee communities. To understand why there is under-utilisation cross-cultural co...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Antoniades, J., Mazza, D., Brijnath, Bianca
Format: Journal Article
Published: Sage Publications Ltd. 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/62989
_version_ 1848760964022796288
author Antoniades, J.
Mazza, D.
Brijnath, Bianca
author_facet Antoniades, J.
Mazza, D.
Brijnath, Bianca
author_sort Antoniades, J.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © The Author(s) 2017. Background: Depression is prevalent globally. While the uptake of mental health services is poor in the general community, the lack of service engagement is particularly profound in migrant and refugee communities. To understand why there is under-utilisation cross-cultural comparisons of how people make sense of mental illnesses such as depression are essential. Aims: To verify how differing cultural aetiologies about depression influence mental health service use, this study investigated illness representational models of depression held by Sri Lankan migrants and Anglo-Australians living with depression. Methods: In-depth interviews (n = 48) were conducted with Sri Lankan migrants and Anglo-Australians living with depression to explore their illness beliefs. Data w ere analysed using Leventhal's illness representational model. Results: Significant overlaps in illness representational models were noted but distinctive differences were found between causal and chronicity beliefs; Sri Lankan migrants more frequently endorsed depression as a time-limited condition underpinned by situational factors, whereas Anglo-Australians endorsed a chronic, biopsychosocial model of depression. Discussion and conclusion: Findings highlight the importance of forging a shared understanding of patient beliefs in the clinical encounter to ensure that interventions are coherent with illness beliefs or at least work towards improving mental health literacy. Differences in illness beliefs also provide insights into possible interventions. For example, psychosocial interventions that align with their illness beliefs may be more suited to Sri Lankan migrants than pharmaceutical or psychological ones.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T10:24:08Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-62989
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:24:08Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Sage Publications Ltd.
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-629892018-02-06T06:23:30Z Becoming a patient-illness representations of depression of Anglo-Australian and Sri Lankan patients through the lens of Leventhal's illness representational model Antoniades, J. Mazza, D. Brijnath, Bianca © The Author(s) 2017. Background: Depression is prevalent globally. While the uptake of mental health services is poor in the general community, the lack of service engagement is particularly profound in migrant and refugee communities. To understand why there is under-utilisation cross-cultural comparisons of how people make sense of mental illnesses such as depression are essential. Aims: To verify how differing cultural aetiologies about depression influence mental health service use, this study investigated illness representational models of depression held by Sri Lankan migrants and Anglo-Australians living with depression. Methods: In-depth interviews (n = 48) were conducted with Sri Lankan migrants and Anglo-Australians living with depression to explore their illness beliefs. Data w ere analysed using Leventhal's illness representational model. Results: Significant overlaps in illness representational models were noted but distinctive differences were found between causal and chronicity beliefs; Sri Lankan migrants more frequently endorsed depression as a time-limited condition underpinned by situational factors, whereas Anglo-Australians endorsed a chronic, biopsychosocial model of depression. Discussion and conclusion: Findings highlight the importance of forging a shared understanding of patient beliefs in the clinical encounter to ensure that interventions are coherent with illness beliefs or at least work towards improving mental health literacy. Differences in illness beliefs also provide insights into possible interventions. For example, psychosocial interventions that align with their illness beliefs may be more suited to Sri Lankan migrants than pharmaceutical or psychological ones. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/62989 10.1177/0020764017723669 Sage Publications Ltd. restricted
spellingShingle Antoniades, J.
Mazza, D.
Brijnath, Bianca
Becoming a patient-illness representations of depression of Anglo-Australian and Sri Lankan patients through the lens of Leventhal's illness representational model
title Becoming a patient-illness representations of depression of Anglo-Australian and Sri Lankan patients through the lens of Leventhal's illness representational model
title_full Becoming a patient-illness representations of depression of Anglo-Australian and Sri Lankan patients through the lens of Leventhal's illness representational model
title_fullStr Becoming a patient-illness representations of depression of Anglo-Australian and Sri Lankan patients through the lens of Leventhal's illness representational model
title_full_unstemmed Becoming a patient-illness representations of depression of Anglo-Australian and Sri Lankan patients through the lens of Leventhal's illness representational model
title_short Becoming a patient-illness representations of depression of Anglo-Australian and Sri Lankan patients through the lens of Leventhal's illness representational model
title_sort becoming a patient-illness representations of depression of anglo-australian and sri lankan patients through the lens of leventhal's illness representational model
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/62989