Literature DB >> 1438658

Culture and somatic experience: the social course of illness in neurasthenia and chronic fatigue syndrome.

N C Ware1, A Kleinman.   

Abstract

An anthropological view of culture and somatic experience is presented through elaboration of the notion that illness has a social course. Contemporary anthropology locates culture in local worlds of interpersonal experience. The flow of events and processes in these local worlds influences the waxing and waning of symptoms in a dialetic involving body and society over time. Conversely, symptoms serve as a medium for the negotiation of interpersonal experience, forming a series of illness-related changes in sufferers' local worlds. Thus, somatic experience is both created by and creates culture throughout the social course of illness. Findings from empirical research on neurasthenia in China, and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) in the United States, corroborate this formulation. Attributions of illness onset to social sources, the symbolic linking of symptoms to life context, and the alleviation of distress with improvement in circumstances point to the sociosomatic mediation of sickness. Transformations occasioned by illness in the lives of neurasthenic and CFS patients confirm the significance of bodily distress as a vehicle for the negotiation of change in interpersonal worlds. An indication of some of the challenges anthropological thinking poses for psychosomatic medicine concludes the discussion.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1438658     DOI: 10.1097/00006842-199209000-00003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychosom Med        ISSN: 0033-3174            Impact factor:   4.312


  28 in total

Review 1.  Toward a model of social course in chronic illness: the example of chronic fatigue syndrome.

Authors:  N C Ware
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1999-09

2.  Decision-making within the social course of dementia: accounts by Chinese-American caregivers.

Authors:  M H Hicks; M S Lam
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1999-12

3.  The meaning of healthy and not healthy: older African Americans and whites with chronic illness.

Authors:  M Silverman; S Smola; D Musa
Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol       Date:  2000

4.  Llaki and ñakary: idioms of distress and suffering among the highland Quechua in the Peruvian Andes.

Authors:  Duncan Pedersen; Hanna Kienzler; Jeffrey Gamarra
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2010-06

5.  Reproducibility and validity of heart rate variability and respiration rate measurements in participants with prolonged fatigue complaints.

Authors:  Judith K Sluiter; Alida M Guijt; Monique H Frings-Dresen
Journal:  Int Arch Occup Environ Health       Date:  2008-11-26       Impact factor: 3.015

6.  "Is it half full or half empty?" Affective responses to chronic illness.

Authors:  Myrna Silverman; Jean Nutini; Donald Musa; Nancy E Schoenberg; Steven M Albert
Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol       Date:  2009-09

7.  Potentially harmful side-effects: medically unexplained symptoms, somatization, and the insufficient illness narrative for viewers of mystery diagnosis.

Authors:  Carol-Ann Farkas
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2013-09

8.  What is called symptom?

Authors:  Thor Eirik Eriksen; Mette Bech Risør
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2014-02

9.  Culture, socioeconomic status, and coronary heart disease risk factors in an African American community.

Authors:  W W Dressler; J R Bindon; Y H Neggers
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  1998-12

10.  Are suicide attempts by young Latinas a cultural idiom of distress?

Authors:  Luis H Zayas; Lauren E Gulbas
Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry       Date:  2012-10-16
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