Effects- Personal and Social
In a personalised context with regards to the effects that depression has on the diagnosed, patients usually exhibit the main signs and symptoms stated above. In addition, the accumulated signs and symptoms, attitudes and personalities in which a depressed individual experiences consequently results in the negative effect on all the health components of their wellbeing, being mental health (the main health component depression affects), emotional health, social health, physical health and spiritual health. In saying that, this also has transversal effects on the patient's personal life. These areas can involve particular person's family, school, work and their overall wellbeing, where he or she can only cope with these specific situations to a certain extent as they are limited to what they can physically process and handle whilst being in a disorderly condition. This is influenced by having pessimistic views, being easily irritable and short-tempered, isolation and marginalisation, introversion, and the summation of stigmatised behaviours and derogatory statements. This would then lead to stress buildup which then has patient being unable to act in a civilised and ordinary manner. Thus, these personal effects that would be experienced by a diagnosed depressed patient would furthermore transverse into effects that would then have an effect on society and their surroundings.
In a socialised interpretation, it is asserted that the social effects that depression has over an individual suffering from a diagnosis of depression is the outcome of personal impacts, as mentioned previously. As a result of the internal impact and conflict the patient is experiencing within themselves, this furthermore leads to an effect on the people they interact with, their surroundings and basically society itself. To illustrate this, as mentioned that those who are depressed exhibit pessimistic views, short-temperedness and introversion, the result of that would be a person who can not present or demonstrate themselves as a civilised person in society, or an excluded individual from all aspects of having a social life. This situation would then have conflicting effects regarding society, targeting the patient's friends, family, teachers, work colleagues and the many other groups that they associate themselves with, thus becoming a social matter. Again, these social effects can stretch past its introversion and short-temperedness counterparts, as the component of mental capability is prevalent. For example, as stated before, the diagnosed person can only cope with situations and work to a certain extent as they are limited to what they can physically process and handle whilst being in a disorderly condition. Especially within the workforce, this type of attitude has its repercussions as it specifically targets their fellow employees as the person themselves are not committed to the job 100%. These are the main significant effects in which affect a depressed person in a social context.
In a personalised context with regards to the effects that depression has on the diagnosed, patients usually exhibit the main signs and symptoms stated above. In addition, the accumulated signs and symptoms, attitudes and personalities in which a depressed individual experiences consequently results in the negative effect on all the health components of their wellbeing, being mental health (the main health component depression affects), emotional health, social health, physical health and spiritual health. In saying that, this also has transversal effects on the patient's personal life. These areas can involve particular person's family, school, work and their overall wellbeing, where he or she can only cope with these specific situations to a certain extent as they are limited to what they can physically process and handle whilst being in a disorderly condition. This is influenced by having pessimistic views, being easily irritable and short-tempered, isolation and marginalisation, introversion, and the summation of stigmatised behaviours and derogatory statements. This would then lead to stress buildup which then has patient being unable to act in a civilised and ordinary manner. Thus, these personal effects that would be experienced by a diagnosed depressed patient would furthermore transverse into effects that would then have an effect on society and their surroundings.
In a socialised interpretation, it is asserted that the social effects that depression has over an individual suffering from a diagnosis of depression is the outcome of personal impacts, as mentioned previously. As a result of the internal impact and conflict the patient is experiencing within themselves, this furthermore leads to an effect on the people they interact with, their surroundings and basically society itself. To illustrate this, as mentioned that those who are depressed exhibit pessimistic views, short-temperedness and introversion, the result of that would be a person who can not present or demonstrate themselves as a civilised person in society, or an excluded individual from all aspects of having a social life. This situation would then have conflicting effects regarding society, targeting the patient's friends, family, teachers, work colleagues and the many other groups that they associate themselves with, thus becoming a social matter. Again, these social effects can stretch past its introversion and short-temperedness counterparts, as the component of mental capability is prevalent. For example, as stated before, the diagnosed person can only cope with situations and work to a certain extent as they are limited to what they can physically process and handle whilst being in a disorderly condition. Especially within the workforce, this type of attitude has its repercussions as it specifically targets their fellow employees as the person themselves are not committed to the job 100%. These are the main significant effects in which affect a depressed person in a social context.