Department of Psychiatry, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Transcult Psychiatry. 2022 Aug;59(4):479-491. doi: 10.1177/13634615211000543. Epub 2021 Apr 9.
Research on mental health in specific communities requires careful attention to cultural context and language. Studies on global mental health have increasingly analyzed idioms of distress, or culturally situated ways of conceptualizing, experiencing, and expressing distress. This study examines how idioms of distress are used and understood in Arcahaie, Haiti. The goal was to enrich current understanding of mental health conceptualization and communication by exploring the heterogeneity of common idioms of distress. Interviews with community members ( = 47) explored meanings and perceived causations of 13 idioms of distress. Major themes included pervasiveness of poverty, ruminative thinking, effects of Vodou and Christian belief systems, embodied distress, and the behavior of "crazy" people (). The findings suggest some specific pathways for potential community engagement projects, including training lay-leaders in cognitive behavioral therapy using existing socioreligious infrastructure and expanding access to social engagement activities. This research contributes to a small but growing body of literature on mental illness in Haiti and to methods for studying idioms of distress.
特定社区的心理健康研究需要仔细关注文化背景和语言。全球心理健康研究越来越多地分析痛苦的习语,或从文化上理解、体验和表达痛苦的特定方式。本研究考察了在海地阿尔卡亚(Arcahaie)如何使用和理解痛苦的习语。其目的是通过探索常见痛苦习语的异质性,丰富当前对心理健康概念化和沟通的理解。对社区成员(=47 人)的访谈探讨了 13 个痛苦习语的含义和感知成因。主要主题包括贫困的普遍性、沉思性思维、伏都教和基督教信仰体系的影响、身体上的痛苦以及“疯狂”人的行为。研究结果表明,一些潜在的社区参与项目具有特定的途径,包括利用现有的社会宗教基础设施培训认知行为疗法的非专业领导者,并扩大社会参与活动的机会。这项研究为海地的精神疾病文献以及痛苦习语的研究方法做出了一定贡献。