Introduction: Conversion disorder is easily one of the least understood neuropsychiatric disorders. There is a great deal of ambiguity with respect to symptom presentation, assessment, etiology, diagnosis, and treatment. However, a common clinical practice associated with the assessment and management of the conversion disorder is the evaluation of a stressor. Recent studies in India have indicated that family stressors are the most frequent. Sociocultural aspects of the client's environment and the illness experience thus form an important part of the client's diagnostic formulation. These aspects also determine help-seeking, treatment adherence, and thus, the outcomes.
Materials And Methods: Fifteen clients suffering from conversion disorder in a tertiary mental health setting in North India, recruited through purposive sampling, were interviewed in-depth. Data were elicited using the cultural formulation interview (CFI). Qualitative content analysis was carried out.
Results: The content analyses summarized the cultural experiences of clients suffering from conversion disorder under structured domains of the CFI. The results are presented in tables along with content examples and represent individual client experiences and conceptualizations of diagnosis, treatment, and implications of suffering from conversion disorder. The findings of this study aim to describe and highlight the cultural experiences of clients with respect to their psychopathology. The most striking recurrent theme in the cultural formulations were the lack of understanding of the nature and cause of illness both in the client as well as the clinician, and therefore a lack of trust and hope in the treatment.
Conclusion: The findings of the current study shed light on the cultural experiences of clients with conversion disorder. These findings emphasize the need for clinicians to incorporate the individual and collective cultural experiences of clients and cultural sensitivity in addition to the clinical diagnoses. The Cultural Formulation Interview of the DSM-5 was found to be very helpful in this regard and we encourage its use by clinicians, especially with clients suffering from conversion disorder, given the strong influences of socio-cultural experiences on psychopathology as well as the intervention.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/indianjpsychiatry.indianjpsychiatry_292_21 | DOI Listing |
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Ophthalmology, International Islamic University Malaysia, Kuantan, MYS.
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University of Chicago Division of the Physical Sciences, Chemistry, 929 E 57th St, Gordon Center for Integrative Science, 60637, Chicago, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
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Laboratory of Infection Biology, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Dhaka, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh.
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