Culture, salience, and psychiatric diagnosis : exploring the concept of cultural congruence & its practical application

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dc.contributor.author Rashed, Mohammed Abouelleil
dc.date.accessioned 2013-12-09T07:35:23Z
dc.date.available 2013-12-09T07:35:23Z
dc.date.issued 2013-07-16
dc.description This paper emerged from a workshop on cultural congruence presented with Professor Derek Bolton at the 15th Conference of the International Network of Philosophy and Psychiatry, Dunedin, New Zealand (July 2012). en_US
dc.description.abstract INTRODUCTION: Cultural congruence is the idea that to the extent a belief or experience is culturally shared it is not to feature in a diagnostic judgement, irrespective of its resemblance to psychiatric pathology. This rests on the argument that since deviation from norms is central to diagnosis, and since what counts as deviation is relative to context, assessing the degree of fit between mental states and cultural norms is crucial. Various problems beset the cultural congruence construct including impoverished definitions of culture as religious, national or ethnic group and of congruence as validation by that group. This article attempts to address these shortcomings to arrive at a cogent construct. RESULTS: The article distinguishes symbolic from phenomenological conceptions of culture, the latter expanded upon through two sources: Husserl’s phenomenological analysis of background intentionality and neuropsychological literature on salience. It is argued that culture is not limited to symbolic presuppositions and shapes subjects’ experiential dispositions. This conception is deployed to re-examine the meaning of (in)congruence. The main argument is that a significant, since foundational, deviation from culture is not from a value or belief but from culturally-instilled experiential dispositions, in what is salient to an individual in a particular context. CONCLUSION: Applying the concept of cultural congruence must not be limited to assessing violations of the symbolic order and must consider alignment with or deviations from culturally-instilled experiential dispositions. By virtue of being foundational to a shared experience of the world, such dispositions are more accurate indicators of potential vulnerability. Notwithstanding problems of access and expertise, clinical practice should aim to accommodate this richer meaning of cultural congruence. en_US
dc.description.librarian am2013 en_US
dc.description.uri http://www.peh-med.com/content/8/1/5 en_US
dc.identifier.citation Rashed, MA 2013, 'Culture, salience, and psychiatric diagnosis : exploring the concept of cultural congruence & its practical application', Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine , vol. 8, no. 5, pp. 1-12. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1747-5341
dc.identifier.other 10.1186/1747-5341-8-5
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/32728
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher BioMed Central en_US
dc.rights © 2013 Rashed; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License en_US
dc.subject Cultural congruence en_US
dc.subject Cultural learning en_US
dc.subject Diagnosis en_US
dc.subject DSM en_US
dc.subject Ethnography en_US
dc.subject Experiential dispositions en_US
dc.subject Intentionality en_US
dc.subject Phenomenology en_US
dc.subject Psychiatry en_US
dc.subject Salience en_US
dc.title Culture, salience, and psychiatric diagnosis : exploring the concept of cultural congruence & its practical application en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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