Prolonged waiting for mental health care has been associated with reported deterioration, yet little research examines how such deterioration manifests in patient language. This study introduces the Waiting-List Deterioration Framework (WLDI), a sociolinguistic framework for analysing how language patterns shift during prolonged waits for mental health care, and examines whether linguistic markers can illuminate experiences of deterioration during service delays. Using discourse analysis across three datasets—public UK mental health forum posts (n=4,872), NHS complaint narratives (n=342), and weekly reflections from 20 volunteers awaiting NHS mental health care over eight weeks—we developed the Waiting-List Linguistic Stress Scale (WLLSS) coding framework across five domains: temporal constriction, agentive contraction, institutional frustration, threshold metaphors, and relational withdrawal. Qualitative analysis revealed systematic shifts in language associated with waiting duration. Four linguistic trajectories were identified: resilient (20%), deteriorating (40%), crisis-escalating (25%), and disengaging (15%). The crisis-escalating trajectory accounted for 80% of escalation events in the longitudinal sample, though this finding should be interpreted with caution given the small sample size. Waiting duration was positively associated with WLLSS scores (β = 0.47, 95% CI 0.38, 0.56, p < .001). The WLDI offers a sociolinguistic framework for understanding how waiting shapes discourse and how language reveals deterioration. Findings are hypothesis-generating and suggest that systematic attention to patient language during waiting periods may illuminate dimensions of institutional experience that conventional metrics miss.
Sultana et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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