Armstrong, Neil Beswick, Laura Vega, Marta Ortega
Published in
Culture, medicine and psychiatry
This article uses ethnography and coproduced ethnography to investigate mental health labels amongst university students in the UK. We find that although labels can still be a source of stigma, they are also both necessary and useful. Students use labels as 'campus technologies' to achieve various ends. This includes interaction with academics and ...
Lee, Jieun
Published in
Culture, medicine and psychiatry
Exploring how time emerges as a central problem for lone family caregivers of people with dementia, this article draws attention to care as a way of being in time with others. In addition to active doings that are oriented toward achieving goods that have drawn much attention in recent anthropological discussion on care, care of an intimate other o...
Kalofonos, Ippolytos
Published in
Culture, medicine and psychiatry
This clinical case study presents the case of a Latina Veteran experiencing psychosis and draws on eclectic theoretical sources, including user/survivor scholarship, phenomenology, meaning-oriented cultural psychiatry & critical medical anthropology, and Frantz Fanon's insight on 'sociogeny,' to emphasize the importance of attending to the meaning ...
Kozelka, Ellen E
Published in
Culture, medicine and psychiatry
In Mexico, community-based, non-biomedical treatment models for substance use are legally recognized in national drug policy, monitored by state-level Departments of Health, and in some cases publicly funded. Academic research on centers that utilize these forms of treatment have focused primarily on documenting their rapid spread and describing th...
Lal, Seema Girija Syurina, Elena González, Laura Pilz Bally, Esmée L S Gopikumar, Vandana Bunders-Aelen, J G F
Published in
Culture, medicine and psychiatry
Technology and screen media has its place in every home, yet the influences of the same are less known. This research aims to explore the vulnerabilities that prompt the mothers to use screen media for their children, prior to a diagnosis of autism for their child. It also aims to explore literature the influence of screen media on speech and langu...
Heckert, Carina Parson, Nia
Published in
Culture, medicine and psychiatry
This article reflects on the narrative data that can emerge through the use of standardized mental health scales, drawing from two studies related to emotional distress among immigrant populations in Texas. In both studies, standardized scales complemented in-depth interviews. The initial goal in using scales was to collect quantifiable data, yet t...
Apers, Hanne Nöstlinger, Christiana Van Praag, Lore
Published in
Culture, medicine and psychiatry
Culturally differing approaches to the distinction between physical and mental health contribute to cultural differences in explanatory models of what we call "mental" health in a Western context. For this reason, we use "(mental) health" in this study when referring to these models or differences in understanding. This interpretative, interview-ba...
Proudfoot, Jesse
Published in
Culture, medicine and psychiatry
A key tenet of critical health research is that individual symptoms must be considered in light of the social and political contexts that shape or, in some cases, produce them. Precisely how oppressive social forces give rise to individual symptoms, however, remains challenging to theorize. This article contributes to debates over the interpretatio...
Frankeberger, Jessica Gagnon, Kelly Withers, Jim Hawk, Mary
Published in
Culture, medicine and psychiatry
There is ample evidence that homelessness is associated with high rates of morbidity and mortality. Street Medicine seeks to eliminate these disparities by providing healthcare on the streets to people who are unsheltered. While extant research describes health disparities for the unsheltered and programmatic approaches to addressing housing instab...
Freeman, Alex Graham, Tanya
Published in
Culture, medicine and psychiatry
In 2014, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Disabilities adopted recommendations advising the replacement of involuntary care with supported care. This has polarised many about how best to provide for People living with Mental Conditions (PLPCs). Notwithstanding the contentions of this debate, we find on a personal discursive level that...