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. 2017 Jul 18;67(661):e538–e546. doi: 10.3399/bjgp17X691889

Table 1.

Study characteristics

Authors Country Method Sample Sampling approach/response rate Primary objective
Chew-Graham et al (2008) 28 UK In-depth interviews, thematic analysis Purposive sample of 19 GPs recruited from participants in multicentre RCT (RESPOND — Randomised Evaluation of antidepressants and Support for women with POstNatal Depression) Sampling was purposive and sought to achieve maximum variation in relation to GPs’ age, sex, length of time in general practice, practice size and level of deprivation To explore the views of GPs and health visitors on the diagnosis and management of postnatal depression
Chew-Graham et al (2009) 29 UK In-depth interviews, thematic analysis Same sample as Chew-Graham (2008) above As above To explore GPs’, health visitors’, and females’ views on the disclosure of symptoms that may indicate depression in primary care
Jayawickrama et al (2010) 31 Australia Anonymous postal survey, content analysis 335 GPs: 70% female 37% aged 45–54 years 84% obtained medical degree in Australia 90% had children 49% of them (or their partners) had >12 months experience of breastfeeding 125/640 (19.5%) GPs responded to survey and provided open-ended comments on prescribing decisions, 54 GPs (8.4%) mentioned depression Explore GPs’ decision making when they are considering recommending or prescribing medication for a breastfeeding woman
McCauley and Casson (2013) 30 UK (Northern Ireland) Semi-structured interviews, Colaizzi’s process of analysis Eight GPs: two male, six female Ten practice managers were invited to identify GPs who were eligible for involvement, eight GPs were identified Develop an in-depth understanding of GPs’ experience of using guidelines in the treatment of perinatal depression and if this enabled them to empower women to become involved in treatment decisions
Khan (2015) 32 Mainly UK Postal survey plus semi-structured interview with three survey responders, interpretive phenomenology 43 GPs: 40 from England, one from Wales, one from Scotland, one from India Over half had <11 years’ experience in general practice, just over a third had practised for 1–3 years. Just over a quarter had >20 years’ experience. 14% felt they held a partially specialist role in perinatal mental health care The GP survey was distributed to an unknown but large number of GPs through virtual portals. Only 43 GPs responded To better understand the contribution of GPs to the area of perinatal mental health