| Literature DB >> 28118821 |
Megan M Campbell1, Goodman Sibeko2, Sumaya Mall2, Adam Baldinger2, Mohamed Nagdee3, Ezra Susser4, Dan J Stein5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although the relationship between cultural beliefs and schizophrenia has received some attention, relatively little work has emerged from African contexts. In this study we draw from a sample of South African Xhosa people with schizophrenia, exploring their cultural beliefs and explanations of illness. The purpose of the article is to examine the relationship between this cultural context and the content of delusions.Entities:
Keywords: Delusions; Illness explanations; Schizophrenia; South Africa; Xhosa people
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28118821 PMCID: PMC5259874 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-017-1196-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
SCID-I Module B Questions about delusions
| Delusions of reference: belief that the individual is attaching personal inference to events in their environment, e.g., believing that others are talking about or taking special notice of them, or that the individual is receiving special messages from random events around them. | |
| 1a. | Has it ever seemed like people were talking about you or taking special notice of you – describe |
| 1b. | What about receiving special messages from the TV, radio, or newspaper, or from the way things were arranged around you - describe |
| Persecutory delusions: belief that others are plotting to actively harm or disadvantage them | |
| 2. | What about anyone going out of their way to give you a hard time, or trying to hurt you – describe |
| Grandiose delusions: beliefs of possessing great wealth, importance or special powers | |
| 3. | Have you ever felt that you were especially important in some way or that you had special powers to do things that other people could not do – describe |
| Somatic delusions: beliefs of abnormal functioning or anatomy of the individual’s body and body parts despite medical evidence to the contrary | |
| 4a. | Have you ever felt that something was very wrong with you physically even though your doctor said nothing was wrong – describe |
| 4b. | Have you ever been convinced that something was very wrong with the way a part or parts of your body looked – describe |
| 4c. | Have you ever felt that something strange was happening to parts of your body – describe |
| Other delusions: unusual religious experiences, unexplained excessive guilt, jealousy or the false perception that someone famous or well known is in love with the individual | |
| 5a. | Have you ever had any unusual religious experiences – describe |
| 5b. | Have you ever felt that you had committed a crime or done something terrible for which you should be punished- describe |
| 5c. | Were you ever convinced that your spouse or partner was being unfaithful to you - describe |
| 5d. | Did you ever feel you had a special, secret relationship with someone famous or someone you didn’t know very well - describe |
| Delusions of being controlled: belief that an external force or person is controlling their thoughts and actions | |
| 6a. | Did you ever feel that someone or something outside yourself was controlling your thoughts or actions against your will – describe |
| 6b. | Did you ever feel that certain thoughts that were not your own were put into your head or taken out of your head – describe |
| Thought broadcasting: belief that their thoughts are perceptible to those around them | |
| 7a. | Did you ever feel as if your thoughts were being broadcast out loud so that other people could actually hear what you were thinking – describe? |
| 7b. | Did you ever believe that someone could read your mind – describe? |
Themes of the content of delusions from a sample of 200 Xhosa people with schizophrenia (subgroups are not mutually exclusive)
| 1. Delusions of reference | 2. Persecutory delusions | 4. Somatic delusions |
| People talking about them: | People plotting against you: | Something physically wrong: |
| 5. Other delusions n = 42 (21%) | ||
| • Relationship with famous person: | ||
| 6. Delusions of being controlled | ||
| a) Who is controlling thoughts? ( | ||
| 3. Grandiose delusions | ||
| Special powers: n = 118 (59%) | ||
| 7. Thought broadcasting | ||
| a) Who was broadcasting your thoughts? ( |
Sample demographics: Xhosa people with schizophrenia (n = 200)
| Patient care | In-patients: 104 (52%) | Out-patients: 96 (48%) |
|---|---|---|
| Region | Eastern Cape: 142 (71%) | Western Cape: 58 (29%) |
| Sex | Male: 168 (84%) | Female: 32 (16%) |
| Age | Range: 20-54 | Average age: 35 years |
| Education | Diploma/Degree: 7 (3.5%) | |
| Grades 11-12: 53 (26.5%) | ||
| Grades 8- 10: 57 (28.5%) | ||
| Grades 1-7: 83 (41.5%) | ||
| Diagnosis Schizophrenia | Paranoid | |
| Undifferentiated | ||
| Disorganized | ||
| Residual | ||
| Other | ||
| Schizoaffective | Bipolar | |
| Depression | ||
| Symptom severity | Full remission | |
| Mild | ||
| Moderate | ||
| Severe | ||
| Not reported | ||
| Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) scores | 0-30 | |
| 31-70 | ||
| 71-90 | ||
| 91-100 | ||
| Not reported | ||
| Co-morbidity | Substance use | |
| *Cannabis | ||
| *Cannabis and Alcohol | ||
| *Other | ||