Transcript Slide 1

Culture
and the Individual
Culture and Mental Illness
Definitions for Mental Illness
• Patterns of behavior and feeling that are
out of keeping with cultural expectations
that bother the person who acts and feels
them and/or that bother others around the
person.
• This implies a statistical model of
recognizing mental illness.
Models for Explaining Mental Illness
Organic/Medical model - something is wrong
biochemically and treatment should correct the
chemical imbalance
Psychogenic model – disturbances in the self that
affect the an individual’s ability to function
psychologically, socially and culturally
Culturally derived model – behaviors and personality
traits that deviate significantly from cultural
norms
Questions about Mental Illness
Cross-Culturally
• Is mental illness present in all cultures?
• Is there more mental illness in modern
complex societies or in traditional, nonliterate cultures?
• Are some societies harder to live in and
therefore produce more mental illness?
• Are different societies characterized by
different types of mental illness?
Laindjura Case Study
Murngin Tribe, Arnhem Land, Australia
• Laindjura is a killer and sorcerer
• Claims to have murdered many people
• Murders could not have happened as he
describes
EG. Tomahawking a young girl between the eyes, pushing his arm up
through her vagina, pulling out some of her intestines, grasped her
heart, collected some of her heart’s blood, sprinkled ants on the
girl’s intestines, then pushed the intestines back into the body and
repaired all wounds so that nothing was visible. Told the girl that
she would die in two days. She gathered lilies, laughing with other
women and died two days later.
Laindjura Case Study
Murngin tribesmen describe Laindjura as:
“a good hunter, an excellent wood carver
who had several wives and a number of
children.”
He was considered perfectly normal in his
society.
Is he mentally ill if the rest of society sees him
as normal?
Culture Bound Disorders
Windigo
• Chippewa, Cree, Montagnais-Naskapi Indians in
Canada – both males and females
• Cannibalistic impulses, delusions, nausea,
anorexia, insomnia
• Delusions about other people turning into edible
animals
• Belief that affected person is possessed by a
cannibal giant with a heart or entrails of ice
• Actual cannibalism does occur in some cases,
usually with a close family member eaten
• Windigo sufferer frequently killed by members of
the group
Culture-Bound Disorders
Ghost Sickness
Affects Kiowa Apache men and women
Occurs at the time of mourning
85% of adults report having the syndrome
Fear of ghosts
Cannibalistic fantasies
Attacked by ghosts
Culture-Bound Disorders
General symptoms
Easily frightened
Compulsive imitative behavior (echopraxia)
Compulsive imitative speech (echolalia)
Latah
Affects women in SouthEast Asia
Affects men in Mongolia
Imu
Affects elderly Ainu women in Northern Japan
Saka
Affects women in Kenya, Africa
Culture-Bound Disorders
Amok Disorders
Symptoms
Extreme agitation
Running aimlessly
Jumping up and down
Break with reality
Increase in respiratory and circulatory activity
Sweating and a decrease in skin temperature
Pibloktoq
Arctic cultures
Wild Man
New Guinea
Amok
Indonesia
Recognizing Mental Illness
Cross-Culturally
• Hospital admission rates
• Using criteria developed from patients in
modern Western culture
• Using dysfunction and discomfort in
everyday life as a criteria
Treating Mental Illness
All therapies
mobilize a sense of hope
include rituals that make patient feel
like something effective is being
done
Active vs quiet therapies
Individualistic vs community-based therapies
Active Treatment
Abreaction Therapies
Work the patient up into a state of
excitement leading to exhaustion and
collapse
Symptoms sometimes disappear on
recovery
Similar effects to electric shock treatment
Active Treatment
Ho’oponopono
Traditional Hawaiian Society
Group therapy that involves everyone in
the household.
Group focuses on the problem, with each
person taking a share of responsibility
for the problem.
Meeting lasts until a complete resolution is
reached
Active Therapies
• Mexican American Curandera
– Girl is depressed and suicidal
– Treated at hospital without success
– Physical trial component
– Psychological component
– Social support component
Quiet Therapies
Morita Therapy
Patient spends 4-7 days in bed isolated
No talking with anyone
No meeting with anyone
No reading, writing, media
No eating between meals
Patient spends 3-7 days out of bed isolated
Same above plus no physical exercise
Writes in a diary that is critiqued by a doctor
Patient spends 7-29 days isolated
Same above with assigned chores
Patient can shop and do some reading (no literature,
philosophy)
Quiet Therapies
Naikan Therapy
Patient is required to
review his/her life
think about what he/she has received
meditate about whether he/she deserves this
Lasts 7 days from 5:30am to 9:00pm
Counselor interviews patient periodically to assure
compliance with rules
Goal is to
get patient back into a responsible position in society
instill a renewed sense of gratitude and respect.