An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis exploring how psychiatrists conceptualise conduct disorder and experience making the diagnosis.

Clin Child Psychol Psychiatry

Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, Maple House, The Slade, Oxford, UK.

Published: January 2021

The way professionals conceptualise CD likely impacts the identity of children given the diagnosis, yet how psychiatrists conceptualise CD, and experience making the diagnosis, is under-researched. Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis explored how psychiatrists conceptualise CD and experience making the diagnosis. Semi-structured interviews captured participants' lived experiences and associated meanings. Four superordinate themes emerged: 'Parents and professionals are overwhelmed by their struggles with CD'; 'What is CD? Uncertainty regarding the cause, but clarity that it is a severe problem'; 'CD as a controversial construct'; and 'Whose issue is it anyway? Battles with blame and responsibility'. The emerging problem-saturated narrative is discussed. Clinical implications include increased training, reflective practice and using a formulation-based approach.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1359104520964519DOI Listing

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