Title: UNDERSTANDING PSYCHOSIS Cultural Paradigms
1UNDERSTANDING PSYCHOSISCultural Paradigms
- Mason Durie
- Massey University
Perspectives
2PERSPECTIVES 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
3A 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
4New Zealands Cultural Diversity
- Pacific Peoples immigration, high fertility
rates - Migrants from India, China and the Asian Pacific
rim - 2050 around half of New Zealands 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
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5Cultural 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
6Panel One
- Mental health professionals
- 2 male psychiatric registrars
- 1 female psychiatrist
- 2 clinical psychologists
Panel Two
7Panel 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
8The 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
9The questions
- What is the problem ?
- How should it be managed ?
- A single word to sum up the situation ?
Problem 1
10The 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
11The ProblemPanel 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
12ManagementPanel One Responses
- Hospitalisation (50/50)
- Cultural assessment
- Early intervention team management
- Clozapine (negative positive symptoms)
- Risperidone
- Family education/support
Management 2
13ManagementPanel 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
14Single Word Summary
- Panel One
- SCHIZOPHRENIA
- Panel Two
- WHANAUNGATANGA
Scientific world views
15Perspectives 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
Maori World Views
16Perspectives 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
17WORLD VIEWS
Two World Views
18WORLD VIEWS Psychiatric Maori
Comparison world views
19WORLD VIEWS Psychiatric Maori
Commonalities
20Psychosis 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
21Barriers 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
22Facilitating 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 Maori community health and social
service providers - Interface workers can negotiate perspectives and
mediate across world views
The aim
23Early 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
24Early 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
25LIVING (AND WORKING) AT THE INTERFACE
Science
Indigenous Knowledge
THE INTERFACE