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UNDERSTANDING PSYCHOSIS Cultural Paradigms. Mason Durie Massey University. Perspectives. PERSPECTIVES ON PSYCHOSIS. Cannot assume that all cultures or populations will agree that psychosis is a medical condition requiring treatment
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UNDERSTANDING PSYCHOSISCultural Paradigms Mason Durie Massey University Perspectives
PERSPECTIVES ON PSYCHOSIS Cannot assume that all cultures or populations will agree that psychosis is a medical condition requiring treatment While accepting that there has been a psychological change, the change may not necessarily be seen as a problem, let alone a medical problem. Demography
A Changing Demography • 2001: Mäori comprised 15 % NZ population • 2051: Mäori (about 1 million) comprise 22 % NZ population • 2006: Mäori 25% of school age population • 2051: 33 % of children in NZ will be Mäori Cultural Diversity
New Zealand’s Cultural Diversity • Pacific Peoples – immigration, high fertility rates • Migrants from India, China and the Asian Pacific rim • 2050 around half of New Zealand’s population will be non-European • English may not be the preferred language • Cultural understandings may be Polynesian or ‘eastern’ or ‘western’ • the effectiveness of health workers will be challenged by cultural diversity www.com
Cultural Impacts on Psychiatry • Reconciling perspectives on health and illness • Understanding the culture of science • Working with people from different world views • Practising at the interface Panel One
Panel One Mental health professionals • 2 male psychiatric registrars • 1 female psychiatrist • 2 clinical psychologists Panel Two
Panel Two Cultural advisors in mental health services • 3 women, 5 men • Average age 64 years • No formal health qualifications • Close links to te ao Maori The case study
The Case Study • Maori male, aged 22 yrs • Increasing isolation over previous 2-4 years; moody, unable to relate to parents • From Northland but living with relatives in PN for past 6 months • Recent change in thinking: • suspicious towards aunty & uncle • several references to himself on TV • able to intercept iwi radio broadcasts • can ‘hear text’ messages • ‘knows’ that PN is an unsafe environment The Questions
The questions • What is the problem ? • How should it be managed ? • A single word to sum up the situation ? Problem 1
‘The Problem’ Panel One Responses • ‘Classic’ • Schizophrenia • Paranoid type • Acute, undifferentiated type • Possibly an acute psychotic reaction as a consequence of leaving home • Psychoactive substance abuse possible • But two year prodromal history suggests a process-type schizophrenia with poor prognosis Problem 2
‘The Problem’Panel Two Responses • Alienated from own rohe (tribal homeland) • Listening for ‘voices from home’ • Seeking wider engagement beyond self • Parental dereliction (transferring son) • Unable to handle close relationships • Clash of mana between two iwi (Manawatu, Tai Tokerau) Management 1
‘Management’Panel One Responses • Hospitalisation (50/50) • Cultural assessment • Early intervention team management • Clozapine (negative & positive symptoms) • Risperidone • Family education/support Management 2
‘Management’Panel Two Responses • Hospitalisation (50/50) • Cultural assessment • Whanau assessment • ‘Whakawatea’ to ease Iwi tensions • Tohunga to advise on parental obligations • Tohunga to investigate possible breach of ‘kawa’, committed by parents • Re-align with family of origin Single Word
‘Single Word Summary’ • Panel One SCHIZOPHRENIA • Panel Two WHANAUNGATANGA Scientific world views
Perspectives on PsychosisPsychiatric (Scientific) World Views • Illness model to explain ‘the problem’ • Diagnosis ≡ the problem • Search for ‘signs’ (rather than meaning) • Grouping symptoms to identify a syndrome • Psycho-biological-(social) determinants • Chemical solutions • Social supports Māori World Views
Perspectives on PsychosisMaori World Views • Fractured relationships • Symptoms have meaning • Explanations lie outside the individual • Short distance causative relationships • whanau and family • Long distance causative relationships • iwi - iwi • ‘Undoing’ necessary for healing world views
WORLD VIEWS Two World Views
WORLD VIEWS Psychiatric Maori Comparison world views
WORLD VIEWS Psychiatric Maori Commonalities
Psychosis Commonalities Between World Views • A problem that needs attention • Assumed (but largely unknown) causes • Requires expert management • Represents a ‘breakdown’ • Has implications for family • May need respite until adequately resolved • Resolution requires restoration of equilibrium Barriers to EI
Barriers to Early Intervention • Delayed intervention may reflect different perspectives of behaviour • Problem may not be seen as ‘medical’ or even ‘psychological’ • The DSM diagnosis may be an irrelevant irritant to whanau who are trying to ‘understand’ rather than ‘classify’ Facilitating Early Intervention
Facilitating Early Intervention • Emphasise the commonalities of different world views • Seek to understand mental phenomena (or at least not dismiss alternate understandings) • Do not equate diagnosis with solving the problem or replacing customised management • Gaining trust requires acknowledging whanau perspectives • Gaining trust also requires winning the confidence of Māori community health and social service providers • Interface workers can negotiate perspectives and mediate across world views The aim
Early Intervention - The Aim • Create avenues for engagement at the earliest possible opportuntity • Maori may not choose to seek help within the medical system • Other agencies may have greater contact with whanau Challenges
Early Intervention - The Challenges • Build methodologies that transcend different understandings of psychosis • Recognise diverse explanations of abnormal behaviour – resist missionary zeal • Strengthen links with community (non-medical) organisations • Extend the psychiatric comfort zone to encompass parallel approaches to care and management end
LIVING (AND WORKING) AT THE INTERFACE Science Indigenous Knowledge THE INTERFACE