Stigma, depression, and somatization in South India.

OBJECTIVE The relationships of stigma to both depression and somatization were studied in psychiatric patients in South India to test the hypothesis that stigma is positively related to depressive symptoms and negatively related to somatoform symptoms. METHOD Illness experience, symptom prominence, and indicators of stigma for 80 psychiatric outpatients were addressed with the Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue. Stigma scores and ratings of symptom prominence were derived. The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R and the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale were administered to assess psychiatric diagnoses and symptoms of depression. Clinical narratives were analyzed to clarify the nature of relationships between stigma and symptom prominence. RESULTS The mean stigma scores were 18.2 (SD = 13.0) for patients with somatoform disorders only, 36.0 (SD = 19.0) for patients with depressive disorders only, and 26.8 (SD = 16.0) for those with mixed depressive and somatoform disorders. The stigma scores were positively related to depressive symptoms, as indicated by Hamilton scale scores and prominence ratings for depressive symptoms, but stigma was inversely related to somatoform symptoms, as indicated by ratings of symptom prominence. Although both depressive and somatic symptoms were distressing, qualitative analysis clarified meanings of perceived stigma, showing that depressive symptoms, unlike somatic symptoms, were construed as socially disadvantageous. CONCLUSIONS The tendency to perceive and report distress in psychological or somatic terms is influenced by various social and cultural factors, including the degree of stigma associated with particular symptoms. This study with the Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue demonstrates how quantitative and qualitative methods can be effectively combined to examine key issues in cultural psychiatry.

[1]  M. Olfson,et al.  Outpatient psychotherapy in the United States, I: Volume, costs, and user characteristics. , 1994, The American journal of psychiatry.

[2]  M. Weiss,et al.  The Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue (EMIC) , 1992, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[3]  Z. J. Lipowski Somatization: the concept and its clinical application. , 1988, The American journal of psychiatry.

[4]  R. Littlewood From Categories to Contexts: A Decade of the ‘New Cross-Cultural Psychiatry’ , 1990, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[5]  A. Jablensky,et al.  Characteristics of depressive patients contacting psychiatric services in four cultures , 1981, Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica.

[6]  Arthur Kleinman,et al.  Culture and depression : studies in the anthropology and cross-cultural psychiatry of affect and disorder , 1987 .

[7]  A. Kleinman Depression, somatization and the "new cross-cultural psychiatry". , 1977, Social science & medicine.

[8]  I. Krause Numbers and Meaning: A Dialogue in Cross-Cultural Psychiatry , 1994, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.

[9]  E. Goffman Stigma; Notes On The Management Of Spoiled Identity , 1964 .

[10]  Arthur Kleinman,et al.  Social Origins of Distress and Disease: Depression, Neurasthenia, and Pain in Modern China , 1987 .

[11]  L. Cronbach Coefficient alpha and the internal structure of tests , 1951 .

[12]  Renata Tesch,et al.  Qualitative research : analysis types and software tools , 1990 .

[13]  M. Weiss,et al.  Cultural Dimensions of Psychiatric Diagnosis , 1995, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[14]  A. Kleinman,et al.  The social course of epilepsy: chronic illness as social experience in interior China. , 1995, Social science & medicine.

[15]  M. Gada,et al.  A Cross Cultural Study of Symptomatology of Depression — Eastern Versus Western Patients — , 1982, The International journal of social psychiatry.

[16]  B. W. Lau,et al.  Somatization among Chinese Depressives in General Practice , 1981, International journal of psychiatry in medicine.

[17]  F. M. Cheung The indigenization of neurasthenia in Hong Kong , 1989, Culture, medicine and psychiatry.