Literature DB >> 1853296

China's importation of Western psychiatry: cultural relatively and mental disorders.

D Woo1.   

Abstract

As one aspect of China's modernization, the importation of Western psychiatric ideas poses a mystery. How are such ideas integrated with traditional assumptions? The apparently wholesale adoption of Western psychiatric categories runs counter to the fact that the Chinese have been generally reluctant to define problems in highly individualized psychiatric terms. Our lack of knowledge as to how the Chinese and Western medical models interface raises questions about the cross-cultural applicability of psychiatric theory. Ironically, the very conceptual categories intended to facilitate professional discourse obscure cultural, political, and epistemological differences between Chinese and Western thought. This paper focuses on certain incongruities in psychiatric theory and practice in order to underscore many unresolved issues that still exist with respect to our cross-cultural understandings of 'mental illness'. Insofar as the trend has been towards standardizing methodology, taxonomies have been generated without a corresponding development in textured comparison. Originating from Western theoretical frameworks, comparative analyses have been otherwise devoid of culture-specific knowledge. The goal of this paper is to show that these categorical assumptions are still premature, and that examining the meaning of current 'rates of mental illness' in China specifically raises more questions than it answers. Hopefully, this discussion will stimulate a renewed interest in ethnographic methods that would uncover locally-based understandings and thereby create the basis for a more sophisticated epidemiological comparison.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1853296     DOI: 10.1007/bf02134776

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Theor Med        ISSN: 0167-9902


  14 in total

1.  The nature of somatic complaints among psychiatric patients: the Chinese case.

Authors:  W Tseng
Journal:  Compr Psychiatry       Date:  1975 May-Jun       Impact factor: 3.735

2.  The development of psychiatric concepts in traditional Chinese medicine.

Authors:  W S Tseng
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1973-10

3.  Traditional Chinese concepts of mental health.

Authors:  Z Z Li
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1984-12-14       Impact factor: 56.272

4.  Culture and psychiatry: a Chinese perspective.

Authors:  T Y Lin
Journal:  Aust N Z J Psychiatry       Date:  1982-12       Impact factor: 5.744

5.  History and present status of modern psychiatry in China.

Authors:  Z Y Xia; M Y Zhang
Journal:  Chin Med J (Engl)       Date:  1981-05       Impact factor: 2.628

6.  A psychologist's perspective on psychiatry in China.

Authors:  L B Brown
Journal:  Aust N Z J Psychiatry       Date:  1980-03       Impact factor: 5.744

7.  Special report: community mental health in China.

Authors:  J C Wolfe
Journal:  Community Ment Health J       Date:  1980

8.  Nursing in China: 3 perspectives. Psychiatric diagnoses range from depression and violence to social and sexual nonconformity.

Authors:  H S Wilson; S A Hutchinson
Journal:  Am J Nurs       Date:  1983-03       Impact factor: 2.220

9.  The collective approach to psychiatric practice in the People's Republic of China.

Authors:  Y C Lu
Journal:  Soc Probl       Date:  1978-10

10.  Styles of verbal expression of emotional and physical experiences: a study of depressed patients and normal controls in China.

Authors:  Y P Zheng; L Y Xu; Q J Shen
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1986-09
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