Literature DB >> 6819113

Protein-energy malnutrition as a culture-bound syndrome.

C M Cassidy.   

Abstract

A new definition of the concept of culture-bound syndrome demonstrates that culture-boundedness is common and applies as well to Western biomedical disease categories as to nonWestern categories. Culture-boundedness is important when a common disorder with a large sociopsychological component is frequently treated, but unsuccessfully. To improve intervention success, therapists must recognize and accept that clients and interventionists may employ widely dissimilar culture-bound explanatory models. Therapists must learn to synthesize among models, neither rejecting nor discounting those of clients. The fact that Western notions of cause are culture-bound has gone largely unrecognized because of the tendency among biomedical scientists to treat science as if it were culture-free and universally comprehensible. This is of course a naive and invalid understanding. These points are illustrated for the case of protein-energy malnutrition. If those who design and facilitate intervention to alleviate hunger can come to understand that the scientific explanatory model of protein-energy malnutrition is only one among several cogent models, they will be in a strong position to understand intervention failure and possibly to overcome it.

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Year:  1982        PMID: 6819113     DOI: 10.1007/bf00118881

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry        ISSN: 0165-005X


  14 in total

1.  Cultural and anthropological factors in infant and maternal nutrition.

Authors:  D B JELLIFFE; F J BENNETT
Journal:  Fed Proc       Date:  1961-03

2.  Nutrition and lactation.

Authors:  C GOPALAN; B BELAVADY
Journal:  Fed Proc       Date:  1961-03

3.  Protein-calorie malnutrition in tropical preschool children; a review of recent knowledge.

Authors:  D B JELLIFFE
Journal:  J Pediatr       Date:  1959-02       Impact factor: 4.406

4.  A nutritional disease of childhood associated with a maize diet.

Authors:  C D Williams
Journal:  Arch Dis Child       Date:  1933-12       Impact factor: 3.791

5.  The great protein fiasco.

Authors:  D S McLaren
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1974-07-13       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  Three faces of culture-bound syndromes: their implications for cross-cultural research.

Authors:  A M Kleinman
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1978-09

7.  Ethno-behaviorism and the culture-bound syndromes: the case of Amok.

Authors:  J E Carr
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1978-09

8.  Saladerra - a culture-bound misfortune syndrome in the Peruvian Amazon.

Authors:  M Dobkin de Rios
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1981-06

9.  Hyper-tension: a folk illness with a medical name.

Authors:  D Blumhagen
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1980-09

10.  Latah: the symbolism of a putative mental disorder.

Authors:  M G Kenny
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1978-09
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  3 in total

1.  Premenstrual syndrome as a western culture-specific disorder.

Authors:  T M Johnson
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1987-09

2.  Culture-bound syndromes and international disease classifications.

Authors:  R Prince; F Tcheng-Laroche
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1987-03

3.  'It was caused by the carelessness of the parents': cultural models of child malnutrition in southern Malawi.

Authors:  Valerie L Flax
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2013-08-14       Impact factor: 3.092

  3 in total

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