1988
DOI: 10.1007/bf00051973
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On the expression of psychosis in different cultures: Schizophrenia in an indian and in a Nigerian community

Abstract: This sub-study of the WHO Determinants of Outcome of Severe Mental Disorders research project was aimed at characterizing the behavioral and expressive qualities of schizophrenia in two highly diverse cultures. Early research has indicated that the core elements involving affect, perceptual and cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia are highly similar in form in most cultures of the world. Much of the cross-cultural literature emphasizes, however, strong differences in the ways in which schizophrenia is actual… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 14 publications
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“…One interesting result of adding ICD-10 DCR symptoms to the analysis was the emergence of what appears to be a catatonic syndrome (table 3). While catatonia appears to be uncommon in developed countries from the last decades of the 20th century [36,37] -with the possible exception of rural Spain [38] -it is quite a common clinical experience in developing countries [16,31]. To our knowledge, previous factor analysis reports did not include a catatonic syndrome.…”
Section: Factor Analysismentioning
confidence: 82%
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“…One interesting result of adding ICD-10 DCR symptoms to the analysis was the emergence of what appears to be a catatonic syndrome (table 3). While catatonia appears to be uncommon in developed countries from the last decades of the 20th century [36,37] -with the possible exception of rural Spain [38] -it is quite a common clinical experience in developing countries [16,31]. To our knowledge, previous factor analysis reports did not include a catatonic syndrome.…”
Section: Factor Analysismentioning
confidence: 82%
“…The robustness of the negative syndromes is an indication that they transcend cultural barriers [17]; but their instability during treatment implies that the concept of deficit schizophrenia does not apply for this group of acutely ill and noninstitutionalized patients. Coupled with the results of good short-term clinical outcome in other reports from Nigeria, it is possible that negative symptoms are a characteristic of the untreated acute state only, among noninstitutionalized Nigerian patients, and hence the rarity of deficit schizophrenia among treated Nigerian patients is one further expression of the heterogeneity of schizophrenia across cultures [31].…”
Section: Factor Analysismentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Results form these studies all point to international variations in these areas, bewildering as this may be for many affiliated with the WHO projects because of their professional beliefs in biological positions and their support for DSM and ICD classification systems (e.g., Day, Nielsen, Korten, Ernberg, et al, 1987;Hooper, Harrison, Janca, & Sartorius, 2007;Katz, Marsella, Dube, Olatawura, et al, 1988). …”
Section: Schizophrenia: a Problematic Term And Disorder(s)mentioning
confidence: 88%