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A Bad Case of the Brain Fags And other mental problems you probably won't get in America.

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xchrom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jul-16-11 11:00 AM
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A Bad Case of the Brain Fags And other mental problems you probably won't get in America.
http://www.slate.com/id/2298453/

it's probably not what you think.


In 1951, Hong Kong psychiatrist Pow-Meng Yap authored an influential paper in the Journal of Mental Sciences on the subject of "peculiar psychiatric disorders"—those that did not fit neatly into the dominant disease-model classification scheme of the time and yet appeared to be prominent, even commonplace, in certain parts of the world. Curiously these same conditions—which include "amok" in Southeast Asia and bouffée délirante in French-speaking countries—were almost unheard of outside particular cultural contexts. The American Psychiatric Association has conceded that certain mysterious mental afflictions are so common, in some places, that they do in fact warrant inclusion as "culture-bound syndromes" in the official Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

The working version of this manual, the DSM-IV, specifies 25 such syndromes. Take "Old Hag Syndrome," a type of sleep paralysis in Newfoundland in which one is visited by what appears to be a rather unpleasant old hag sitting on one's chest at night. (If I were a bitter, divorced straight man, I'd probably say something diabolical about my ex-wife here.) Then there's gururumba, or "Wild Man Syndrome," in which New Guinean males become hyperactive, clumsy, kleptomaniacal, and conveniently amnesic, "Brain Fag Syndrome" (more on that in a moment), and "Stendhal Syndrome," a delusional disorder experienced mostly by Italians after gazing upon artistic masterpieces. The DSM-IV defines culture-bound syndromes as "recurrent, locality-specific patterns of aberrant behavior and troubling experience that may or may not be linked to a particular diagnostic category."

And therein lies the nosological pickle: The symptoms of culture-bound syndromes often overlap with more general, known psychiatric conditions that are universal in nature, such as schizophrenia, body dysmorphia, and social anxiety. What varies across cultures, and is presumably moulded by them, is the unique constellation of symptoms, or "idioms of distress."
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Some scholars believe that many additional distinct culture-bound syndromes exist. One that's not in the manual but could be, argue psychiatrists Gen Kanayama and Harrison Pope in a short paper published earlier this year in the Harvard Review of Psychiatry, is "muscle dysmorphia." The condition is limited to Western males, who suffer the delusion that they are insufficiently ripped. "As a result," write the authors, "they may lift weights compulsively in the gym, often gain large amounts of muscle mass, yet still perceive themselves as too small." Within body-building circles, in fact, muscle dysmorphia has long been recognized as a sort of reverse anorexia nervosa. But it's almost entirely unheard of among Asian men. Unlike hypermasculine Western heroes such as Hercules, Thor, and the chiseled Arnold of yesteryear, the Japanese and Chinese have tended to prefer their heroes fully clothed, mentally acute, and lithe, argue Kanayama and Pope. In fact, they say anabolic steroid use is virtually nonexistent in Asian countries, even though the drugs are considerably easier to obtain, being available without a prescription at most neighborhood drugstores.
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graywarrior Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jul-16-11 11:03 AM
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1. Fascinating
:wow:
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MineralMan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jul-16-11 11:06 AM
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2. I have an antique electrical quack medical device that promises
to cure "Brain Fag." I haven't done a clinical trial with it, though.
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Lionessa Donating Member (842 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jul-16-11 12:03 PM
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3. Actually after reading further, I think that it simply cases wherein
the disorder is "normal" anxiety, schizophrenia, or whatever, but it's (the mental disorder's) expression is strongly related to societal influence. So in Japan, people have anxiety and it's expressed by the fear to glance incorrectly at another, in the US it's stuttering and/or head down and still not meeting people's gaze. I'm not seeing unique differing cultural disorders, just culturally related expressions of common disorders.
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Odin2005 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jul-16-11 02:36 PM
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4. Of course culture affects the exact expression of mental illnesses. How is this news?
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HuckleB Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-01-11 01:55 PM
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5. Kick.
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semillama Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-11 11:23 AM
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6. "The Brain Fags" would be a great name for a band. n/t
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