2005
DOI: 10.1177/0957154x05046167
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Race, culture and psychiatry: a history of transcultural psychiatry

Abstract: The term 'transcultural psychiatry' has encompassed changing notions of race, culture and psychiatry and, as a result, it is a difficult concept to define. For a long time psychiatrists and social scientists have been commenting on how the psyches and psychiatric illnesses differ in non-White populations. However, transcultural psychiatry was not created as a distinct discipline until after World War II. This article will attempt to tell the story of transcultural psychiatry, charting its genesis in the afterm… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(35 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
(21 reference statements)
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“…Transcultural theory is particularly dominant in nursing, and this is the discourse that is primarily addressed in this paper. Nevertheless, many medical texts and those relating to other ‘professions allied to medicine’ display a similar theoretical stance (Qureshi 1994; Hayles and Adu 2004; Bains 2005) and the critique that is advanced here can also be applied to accounts of transcultural healthcare practice more generally.…”
mentioning
confidence: 82%
“…Transcultural theory is particularly dominant in nursing, and this is the discourse that is primarily addressed in this paper. Nevertheless, many medical texts and those relating to other ‘professions allied to medicine’ display a similar theoretical stance (Qureshi 1994; Hayles and Adu 2004; Bains 2005) and the critique that is advanced here can also be applied to accounts of transcultural healthcare practice more generally.…”
mentioning
confidence: 82%
“…The importance of developing appropriate research tools, such as scales and questionnaires that were culturally valid was emphasized. Cultural psychiatrists also lobbied for more resources to be devoted to the mental health problems of ethnic minorities (Bains, 2005). …”
Section: Introduction: History Of Cultural Psychiatry In the Ukmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Transcultural psychiatry to the psychiatrists emphasized the universal nature of disease entities. Transcultural psychiatry to the anthropologists emphasized the importance of understanding mental illness in the terms of the patient's cultural context and personal history, and examining, at the same time, the "culture" of psychiatry itself (Bains 2005). As a consequence of this confrontation, psychiatrists assumed more radically post-analytic and neoKraepelinian positions, and anthropologists became "too antipsychiatrists" (Estroff 1971).…”
Section: The Hospitalization Of Milocasmentioning
confidence: 99%