Literature DB >> 20694866

How Iranian lay people in three ethnic groups conceptualize a case of a depressed woman: an explanatory model.

Masoumeh Dejman1, Ameneh Setareh Forouzan, Shervin Assari, Maryam Rasoulian, Alireza Jazayery, Hossein Malekafzali, Monir Baradaran Eftekhari, Katayon Falahat, Solvig Ekblad.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE(S): Although depression is a major public health problem, little is known about lay people's views of this subject in Iran. The aim of this study was to explore how depression in women is viewed among lay people in three major ethnic groups--Kurd, Turk, and Fars.
DESIGN: Participants were selected from public urban healthcare centers. Four focus group discussions were conducted for each of the three ethnic groups and classified by level of education from three locations, in the capital city (Tehran), west (Ilam), and the northwest (Tabriz) of Iran. Twelve focus groups; 38 men and 38 women have been conducted by using a case vignette describing a woman with major depression.
RESULTS: Depression symptoms were perceived as a temporary phenomenon. It was regarded as a colloquial term for feeling blue, mostly related to external stressors (social model). The common terms used in all ethnic groups were depression, and nerve/soul distress. Environmental cause and war were considered as external causes of the symptoms, and emotional factors, cognition distortion, and biological reasons, as internal factors. The participants believed it was necessary to seek help from religion, family and friends, positive thinking, and distraction from social problems, besides consultations with psychologists as counselors. Medication was often seen as the last resort. Stigma was mentioned as an important factor that makes people avoid visiting psychiatrists.
CONCLUSION: These data may have implications for mental healthcare practice, especially for the approach to diagnosis of depression. Moreover, there is a need for developing and integrating gender-relevant and cultural indicators in the existing national mental health systems in Iran.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20694866     DOI: 10.1080/13557858.2010.488262

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ethn Health        ISSN: 1355-7858            Impact factor:   2.772


  15 in total

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Authors:  Shervin Assari
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2.  Ethnic Differences in Separate and Additive Effects of Anxiety and Depression on Self-rated Mental Health Among Blacks.

Authors:  Shervin Assari; Masoumeh Dejman; Harold W Neighbors
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3.  Gender Differences in Longitudinal Links between Neighborhood Fear, Parental Support, and Depression among African American Emerging Adults.

Authors:  Shervin Assari; Jocelyn R Smith; Cleopatra Howard Caldwell; Marc A Zimmerman
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4.  Demographic and Socioeconomic Determinants of Physical and Mental Self-rated Health Across 10 Ethnic Groups in the United States.

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5.  How Iranian women conceptualize mental health: an explanatory model.

Authors:  Arash Mirabzadeh; Ameneh Setareh Forouzan; Farahnaz Mohammadi; Masoumeh Dejman; Monir Baradaran Eftekhari
Journal:  Iran J Public Health       Date:  2014-03       Impact factor: 1.429

6.  Causal beliefs about depression in different cultural groups-what do cognitive psychological theories of causal learning and reasoning predict?

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7.  Psychosocial Correlates of Body Mass Index in the United States: Intersection of Race, Gender and Age.

Authors:  Shervin Assari
Journal:  Iran J Psychiatry Behav Sci       Date:  2016-05-16

8.  Psychiatric Disorders Differently Correlate with Physical Self-Rated Health across Ethnic Groups.

Authors:  Shervin Assari
Journal:  J Pers Med       Date:  2017-11-13

9.  Neighborhood Safety and Major Depressive Disorder in a National Sample of Black Youth; Gender by Ethnic Differences.

Authors:  Shervin Assari; Cleopatra Howard Caldwell
Journal:  Children (Basel)       Date:  2017-02-23

10.  Can a psychosocial intervention programme teaching coping strategies improve the quality of life of Iranian women? A non-randomised quasi-experimental study.

Authors:  Hamideh Addelyan Rasi; Toomas Timpka; Kent Lindqvist; Alireza Moula
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2013-03-25       Impact factor: 2.692

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