Culture, Illness, and Care: Clinical Lessons From Anthropologic and Cross-Cultural Research
Abstract
Cultural patterning of sickness and care
Disease/illness
Case 1: A 33-year-old Chinese man (Cantonese-speaking) came to the medical clinic at the Massachusetts General Hospital with tiredness, dizziness, general weakness, pains in the upper back described as rheumatism, a sensation of heaviness in the feet, 9.07-kg (20-lb) weight loss, and insomnia of 6 months’ duration. He denied any emotional complaints. Past medical history was noncontributory. Medical workup was unrevealing, except that the patient seemed anxious and looked depressed. He refused to acknowledge either, however. He initially refused psychotherapy, stating that talk therapy would not help him. He finally accepted psychiatric care only after it was agreed that he would be given medication. During the course of his care, the patient never accepted the idea that he was suffering from a mental illness. He described his problem, as did his family, as due to “wind” (fung) and “not enough blood” (mkaù-huèt).
The patient was born into a family of educated farmers and teachers in a village in Kwangtung Province. He and his family moved to Canton when he was a young child. His father died during the war with Japan, and the patient remembered recurrent feelings of grief and loneliness throughout his childhood and adolescence. At age 10 he accompanied his family to Hong Kong; 10 years later they moved to the U.S. The patient denied any family history of mental illness. He reported that his health problem began 2 years before when he returned to Hong Kong to find a wife. He acquired the “wind” disease, he believes in retrospect, after having overindulged in sexual relations with prostitutes, which resulted in loss of huèt-hèi (blood and vital breath) causing him to suffer from “cold” (leūng) and “not enough blood.” His symptoms worsened after his wife’s second miscarriage (they have no children) and shortly after he had lost most of his savings. However, he denied feeling depressed at that time, though he admitted being anxious, fearful, irritable, and worried about his financial situation. These feelings he also attributed to “not enough blood.”
The patient first began treating himself for his symptoms with traditional Chinese herbs and diet therapy. This involved both the use of tonics to “increase blood” (po-huèt) and treatment with symbolically “hot” (ît) food to correct his underlying state of humoral imbalance. He did this only after seeking advice from his family and friends in Boston’s Chinatown. They concurred that he was suffering from a “wind” and “cold” disorder. They prescribed other herbal medicines when he failed to improve. They suggested that he return to Hong Kong to consult traditional Chinese practitioners there.
While the patient was seen at the Massachusetts General Hospital’s medical clinic, he continued to use Chinese drugs and to seek out consultation and advice from friends, neighbors, and recognized “experts” in the local Chinese community. He was frequently told that his problem could not be helped by Western medicine. At the time of receiving psychiatric care, the patient was also planning to visit a well-known traditional Chinese doctor in New York’s Chinatown, and he was also considering acupuncture treatment locally. He continued taking Chinese drugs throughout his illness and never told his family or friends about receiving psychiatric care. He expressed gratitude, however, that the psychiatrist listened to his views about his problem and that he explained to him in detail psychiatric ideas about depression. He remembered feeling bad about his care in the medical clinic where after the lengthy workup, almost nothing was explained to him and no medicine was given. He had decided not to return to that clinic.
The patient responded to a course of anti-depressant medication with complete remission of all symptoms. He thanked the psychiatrist for his help, but confided that (1) he remained confident that he was not suffering from a mental illness, (2) talk therapy had not been of help, (3) antidepressants perhaps were effective against “wind” disorders, and (4) because he had concurrently taken a number of traditional Chinese herbs, it was uncertain what had been effective, and perhaps the combination of both traditional Chinese and Western drugs had been responsible for his cure.
Lessons from a study of indigenous healers
Cultural construction of clinical reality
Case 2: The patient was a 60-year-old white Protestant grandmother recovering from pulmonary edema secondary to atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease and chronic congestive heart failure on one of the medical wards at the Massachusetts General Hospital. Her behavior in the recovery phase of her illness was described as bizarre by the house staff and nurses. Although her cardiac status greatly improved and she became virtually asymptomatic, she induced vomiting and urinated frequently into her bed. She became angry when told to stop. Psychiatric consultation was requested.
Review of the lengthy medical record showed nothing as to the personal significance of the patient’s behavior. When asked to explain why she was engaging in it and what meaning it had for her, the patient’s response was most revealing. Describing herself as the wife and daughter of plumbers, the patient noted that she was informed by the medical team responsible for her care that she had “water in the lungs.” Her concept of the anatomy of the human body had the chest hooked up to two pipes leading to the mouth and the urethra. The patient explained that she had been trying to remove as much water from her chest as possible through self-induced vomiting and frequent urination. She analogized the latter to the work of the “water pills” she was taking, which she had been told were getting rid of the water on her chest. She concluded: “I can’t understand why people are angry at me.” After appropriate explanations, along with diagrams, she acknowledged that the “plumbing” of the body is remarkable and quite different from what she had believed. Her unusual behavior ended at that time.
Case 3: A 26-year-old Guatemalan woman who had resided in the U.S. for 10 years and who was being treated for severe regional enteritis with intravenous hyperalimentation and restriction of all oral intake had become angry, withdrawn, and uncooperative. She believed her problem to be caused by the witchcraft of her fiance’s sister. She also believed that because she was no longer receiving food by mouth, and especially because she could no longer regulate her hot/cold balance of nutrients, the basis of the traditional health belief of the folk medical system she grew up in, she had been written off by her doctors as unlikely to live. Her behavior followed directly from this mistaken belief. She was unable to talk about her ideas because of fear of ridicule, and her doctors were totally unaware of this problem, except as manifested in her difficult behavior. When the psychiatric consultant encouraged the patient to express her own ideas about the illness, she was visibly relieved to find her ideas treated with respect, although the doctor indicated he did not share them. Her hostile and withdrawn behavior disappeared and she cooperated with the treatment regimen when she was reassured that the doctors had not given up on her.
Case 4: A 38-year-old university professor with chest pain was diagnosed in a cardiology clinic as having angina based on coronary artery disease, but refused to accept the diagnosis. He insisted that the cardiologist acknowledge that he had a pulmonary embolus. The psychiatric consultant uncovered not a disease phobia, but a popular explanatory model: the belief, shared by his wife and friend that the development of angina signals the end of an active lifestyle and the onset of invalidism. This patient was trying to prove that his cardiologist had made a mistake and that he had been mis-labeled. Unfortunately, his cardiologist did not appreciate this hidden explanatory model and, therefore, could not attempt to correct it or negotiate with it. After eliciting the patient’s model and informing the cardiologist about his fears of the angina label, both were able to frankly discuss this problem and the patient came to accept his disease along with the need for certain changes in lifestyle.
Case 5: A 56-year-old Italian-American former railroad conductor, recovering from an acute myocardial infarction in the coronary care unit of the Massachusetts General Hospital, had been evaluated in the same facility 2 years before for chest pain. At that time his cardiologist gave him a full explanation of the etiology, pathophysiology, and course of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. During the more recent hospitalization, the patient reported a rather different model of his problem. He had never told his cardiologist about this model, even though it was his chief belief about his illness and had been since the time of his last admission. In his view and that of his family, there are two major heart diseases: angina pectoris and coronary thrombosis. The former is mild and self-limited. He believed that the former and the latter are mutually exclusive, so that to suffer from the milder one is to have the good fortune not to have to worry about experiencing the more severe and dangerous one. He thus justified his almost complete failure to comply with his medical regimen on logical grounds, understood and supported by his family who had shared his denial of serious illness.
Clinical hypotheses generated by anthropologic and cross-cultural studies
A clinical strategy for applying social science concepts
Patient's model
Doctor's model
Comparison of models
Negotiation of shared models
The idea of a clinical social science: implication for education and clinical practice
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