Literature DB >> 28704701

"Developing culturally sensitive affect scales for global mental health research and practice: Emotional balance, not named syndromes, in Indian Adivasi subjective well-being".

Jeffrey G Snodgrass1, Michael G Lacy2, Chakrapani Upadhyay3.   

Abstract

We present a perspective to analyze mental health without either a) imposing Western illness categories or b) adopting local or "native" categories of mental distress. Our approach takes as axiomatic only that locals within any culture share a cognitive and verbal lexicon of salient positive and negative emotional experiences, which an appropriate and repeatable set of ethnographic procedures can elicit. Our approach is provisionally agnostic with respect to either Western or native nosological categories, and instead focuses on persons' relative frequency of experiencing emotions. Putting this perspective into practice in India, our ethnographic fieldwork (2006-2014) and survey analysis (N = 219) resulted in a 40-item Positive and Negative Affect Scale (PANAS), which we used to assess the mental well-being of Indigenous persons (the tribal Sahariya) in the Indian states of Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh. Generated via standard cognitive anthropological procedures that can be replicated elsewhere, measures such as this possess features of psychiatric scales favored by leaders in global mental health initiatives. Though not capturing locally named distress syndromes, our scale is nonetheless sensitive to local emotional experiences, frames of meaning, and "idioms of distress." By sharing traits of both global and also locally-derived diagnoses, approaches like ours can help identify synergies between them. For example, employing data reduction techniques such as factor analysis-where diagnostic and screening categories emerge inductively ex post facto from emotional symptom clusters, rather than being deduced or assigned a priori by either global mental health experts or locals themselves-reveals hidden overlaps between local wellness idioms and global ones. Practically speaking, our perspective, which assesses both emotional frailty and also potential sources of emotional resilience and balance, while eschewing all named illness categories, can be deployed in mental health initiatives in ways that minimize stigma and increase both the acceptability and validity of assessment instruments.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cultural syndromes; Global mental health; Idioms of distress; India; Medical anthropology; Psychiatric nosology

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28704701     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.06.037

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  3 in total

Review 1.  The integration of idioms of distress into mental health assessments and interventions: a systematic review.

Authors:  C Cork; B N Kaiser; R G White
Journal:  Glob Ment Health (Camb)       Date:  2019-05-07

2.  The cross-cultural expression of internet gaming distress in North America, Europe, and China.

Authors:  Jeffrey G Snodgrass; Wen Zhao; Michael G Lacy; Shaozeng Zhang; Rachel Tate
Journal:  Addict Behav Rep       Date:  2018-11-23

3.  Ethnic Identity and Well-Being of Andean Indigenous People: The Effect of Individualistic and Collectivist Value Orientations.

Authors:  Andrés Gutiérrez-Carmona; Alfonso Urzúa; Karina Rdz-Navarro
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-06-25       Impact factor: 3.390

  3 in total

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