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Published in: Current Psychiatry Reports 6/2014

01-06-2014 | Anxiety Disorders (DJ Stein, Section Editor)

Cross-Cultural Aspects of Anxiety Disorders

Authors: Stefan G. Hofmann, Devon E. Hinton

Published in: Current Psychiatry Reports | Issue 6/2014

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Abstract

A person’s cultural background influences the experience and expression of emotions. In reviewing the recent literature on cross-cultural aspects of anxiety disorders, we identified some culturally related ethnopsychology/ethnophysiology factors (the culture’s conceptualizations of how the mind and body function) and contextual factors that influence anxiety disorders. Ethnopsychology/ethnophysiology factors include the person’s ideas about the mental and bodily processes (and their interaction), whereas contextual factors are associated with the social norms and rules that may contribute to anxiety, including individualism vs. collectivism and self-construals. From the perspective of ethnopsychology/ethnophysiology and contextual factors, we will discuss “khyâl cap” (“wind attacks”), taijin kyofusho, and ataques de nervios, three prominent examples of culture-specific expressions of anxiety disorders that have all been included in the DSM-5 list of cultural concepts of distress.
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Metadata
Title
Cross-Cultural Aspects of Anxiety Disorders
Authors
Stefan G. Hofmann
Devon E. Hinton
Publication date
01-06-2014
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Current Psychiatry Reports / Issue 6/2014
Print ISSN: 1523-3812
Electronic ISSN: 1535-1645
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11920-014-0450-3