In an article titled “ Effects of Culture on Recovery From Transient Psychosis” the author asks why premodern cultures studied by the World Health Organization had 10 times the rate of acute onset psychosis followed by full recovery as that found in more modern cultures.

The author contends that “Traditional treatment in a premodern society usually consists of a prescribed period of rest; sympathy; heightened social support; alleviation of underlying social stresses; exploration of alternative coping
strategies; and various types of traditional healing rituals, sometimes lasting days or weeks, and frequently resulting in the full recovery of the patient.”  

While “modern medical experts” make fun of “primitive” perspectives about spirits and the use of “witch doctors” to address them, it seems that any truly “evidence based” approach to understanding psychosis would be more interested in figuring out how and why they were so effective.

Contrast the “primitive” approach with the relative isolation and drugging imposed on the newly diagnosed psychotic person in in a modern culture.  The person is identified as “biochemically imbalanced” rather than overcome by stressful life events, no attempts are made to really understand him or her, the experience is identified as an illness with no spiritual consequences, and no coping tools are suggested beyond taking pills as prescribed.

I am reminded of an early drug trial on antipsychotics.  They had 4 groups, three groups were each on a different antipsychotic, while the fourth group was a placebo.  After about 6 weeks, each of the drug groups was doing better than the placebo group. But when they came back and checked on how everybody was doing after a year, they found that the group that had been started on placebo was doing better than any of the three groups started on drugs.  Instead of concluding that there was something wrong with rushing people into drugs however, the experimenters hypothesized that the group initially started on placebo was only doing better because they had been noticed by others to be doing worse because of not being on drugs, and this had elicited sympathy and concern from the people who noticed, and it was the extra care that they received that resulted in them doing better when measured a year later.  Of course, it never occurred to the experimenters that giving a drug to people that made them seem like they didn’t need extra support, resulting in them not getting the support they really needed, so that they would be doing worse later, may not have been a good idea.  (Not to mention that more drugs meant more risk of nasty side effects as well.)  And so the modern era of drugging and lack of empathy was begun. More »

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Posted By: RonUnger
Last Edit: 12 Feb 2010 @ 10 04 PM

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