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Friday, 5 February 2010

Crazy Like Us

You've probably heard about Crazy Like Us, the new book by Urban Tribes author Ethan Watters. But you probably haven't bought it yet. You really should.

Crazy Like Us is a vivid, humane, and thought-provoking examination of "the globalization of the American psyche" - the process by which, slowly but surely, the world has adopted America's way of thinking about mental illness.

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The key to the American approach is the 844-page Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association - the DSM, or as the saying goes, the Bible of psychiatry. The heart of the DSM is a long list of disorders, each with a code number, and each with an accompanying list of symptoms: Major Depressive Disorder (296.2), Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (309.81), Schizophrenia (295.90), etc. The DSM is more than just a catalogue of names and numbers, however; it's part a conceptual system, a way of deciding what kind of feelings and behaviours are normal, and which are pathological; it's almost a philosophy of life.

On the most straightforward level, Crazy Like Us is the story of how, over the past 20 years, this system has gone from being American to international, displacing the ways of thinking found in other countries and cultures. In four chapters, Watters describes the rise of anorexia in Hong Kong, PTSD in Sri Lanka following the 2004 tsunami, schizophrenia in Madagascar, and major depressive disorder in Japan.

This much is plain fact. The DSM is now the internationally-recognized standard for psychiatric diagnosis; almost all academic papers in psychiatry make use of the American criteria, or the extremely similar ICD-10. What's interesting, however, is Watters' account of how the DSM spread so quickly to other countries, displacing what were - in many cases - equally rich and complex local vocabularies of distress and disorder.

In the case of Japan, Watters' answer is simple: the big drug companies, in the hopes of opening a new market for SSRI antidepressants, promoted the concept of clinical depression as a common ailment, through campaigns in the Japanese media. (Japan did have an "indigenous" concept of depression, utsubyo, but it was seen as a rare, serious disease, like schizophrenia.)

But in "developing" countries, such as Sri Lanka, the picture is rather more complex. Sri Lankans were eager to learn from the West about mental illness because of their respect for Western science and technology. Americans can put people into space - surely, they know a lot about everything, including medicine, including psychiatry.

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Yet there's another level to the story of Crazy Like Us, a more interesting and more controversial one. Watters' argues that the globalization of the American way of thinking has actually changed the nature of "mental illness" around the world. As he puts it:
In the process of teaching the rest of the world to think like us, we’ve been exporting our Western “symptom repertoire” as well. That is, we’ve been changing not only the treatments but also the expression of mental illness in other cultures.
Essentially, mental illness - or at least, much of it - is a way of unconsciously expressing emotional or social distress and tension. Our culture, which includes of course our psychiatric textbooks, tells us various ways in which distress can manifest, provides us with explanations and narratives to make our distress understandable. And so it happens. The symptoms are not acted or "faked" - they're as real to the sufferer as they are to anyone else. But they are culturally shaped.


The historian of psychiatry, Edward Shorter, has written of how, in late 19th century Europe, people (mostly women) were said to be especially prone to suffering from "hysterical paralysis", but every time and place has its own shared "symptom repertoire". Culture does not just create symptoms out of thin air - there has to be some kind of underlying stress. As Watters puts it
We can become psychologically unhinged for many reasons that are common to all, like personal traumas, social upheavals or biochemical imbalances in our brains. ... Whatever the trigger, however, the ill individual and those around him invariably rely on cultural beliefs and stories to understand what is happening.
Watters links anorexia in 1990s Hong Kong to the anxiety caused by the impending transfer of control from Britain to China, a geopolitical event which caused personal worry and social disruption as people or families emigrated. But it was the high-profile 1994 case of a young girl's death from self-starvation, and the subsequent media attention paid to the Western concept of Anorexia Nervosa (DSM code 307.1), that put self-starvation into the symptom repertoire for distressed young women and led to the rise in cases.

The idea that America has exported not just concepts of illness, but illnesses themselves, is a provocative one. Is it true? Commentators have pointed out that Watters' explanation of the rise of anorexia in Hong Kong is rather simplistic. There were many social and cultural changes going on during the 1990s, most of which had nothing to do with the DSM. How do we know that increasing media promotion of dieting, and the fashion for thinness, wasn't also important? In truth, we don't, but I do not think that Watters' argument requires psychiatry to be the only force at work.

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Overall, Crazy Like Us is a fascinating book about transcultural psychiatry and medical anthropology. But it's more than that, and it would be a mistake - and deeply ironic - if we were to see it as a book all about foreigners, "them". It's really about us, Americans and by extension Europeans (although there are some interesting transatlantic contrasts in psychiatry, they're relatively minor.)

If our way of thinking about mental illness is as culturally bound as any other, then our own "psychiatric disorders" are no more eternal and objectively real than those Malaysian syndromes like amok, episodes of anger followed by amnesia, or koro, the fear the that ones genitals are shrinking away.

In other words, maybe patients with "anorexia", "PTSD" and perhaps "schizophrenia" don't "really" have those things at all - at least not if these are thought of as objectively-existing diseases. In which case, what do they have? Do they have anything? And what are we doing to them by diagnosing and treating them as if they did?

Watters' does not discuss such questions; I think this was the right choice, because a full exploration of these issues would fill at least one book in itself. But here are a few thoughts:

First, the most damaging thing about the globalization of Western psychiatric concepts is not so much the concepts themselves, but their tendency to displace and dissolve other ways of thinking about suffering - whether they be religious, philosophical, or just plain everyday talk about desires and feelings. The corollary of this, in terms of the individual Western consumer of the DSM, i.e. you and me, is the tendency to see everything through the lens of the DSM, without realizing that it's a lens, like a pair of glasses that you've forgotten you're even wearing. So long as you keep in mind that it's just one system amongst others, a product of a particular time and place, the DSM is still useful.

Second, if it's true that how we conceptualize illness and suffering affects how we actually feel and behave, then diagnosing or narrativizing mental illness is an act of great importance, and potentially, great harm. We currently spend billions of dollars researching major depressive disorder and schizophrenia, but very little on investigating "major depressive disorder" and "schizophrenia" as diagnoses. Maybe this is an oversight.

Finally, if much "mental illness" is an expression of fundamental distress shaped by the symptom pool of a particular culture, then we need to first map out and understand the symptom pool, and the various kinds of distress, in order to have any hope of making sense of what's going on in any individual on a psychological, social or neurobiological level. To put it another way, you need to understand people before you can understand psychiatry. After reading Crazy Like Us, I think I understand both a little bit better, and I strongly recommend it.

Links:
  • Ethan Watters' Crazy Like Us blog.
  • The Americanization of Mental Illness, Watters' much-read NYT article which is a fine summary of the book's argument, but being so short, misses much of the human detail which make Crazy Like Us so interesting, in particular when Watters is writing about the response of PTSD experts to the 2004 tsunami, and the life of a Madagascan woman with schizophrenia and her family.
  • Exporting American Mental Illness, an excellent discussion of the article over at Neuroanthropology.
  • Did Antidepressants Depress Japan? A 2004 article on the Japanese antidepressants and depression story.

19 comments:

pj said...

I do wonder whether things like mixed anxiety and depressive symptoms and similar (but different) syndromes in other countries simply represent culturally specific languages for expressing distress.

Looked at that way it isn't necessarily the case that the DSM is displacing indigenous syndromes or symptoms, rather it is providing a trans-cultural schema in which to codify and conceptualise low level emotional turmoil.

ML, MD said...

An interesting book, albeit limited in scope and targets. I would caution the authors of the book and the review not to confuse skepticism with relativism. More on the subject in "In Praise of Doubt" by Peter Berger and Anton Zijderveld

The book borders (didn't cross the line, though) with Thomas Szasz's lunacy who sees "The classification of (mis)behavior as illness provides an ideological justification for state-sponsored social control" basically implying that mental illness is an artificial construct and all psychiatrist are serving evil, repressive society.

Mental disorders, notwithstanding legitimate inquiry, are real, objective and culturally un-bound.

Popularity of bad classification (DSM) is not a justifiable reason to throw away the proverbial baby.

The field is begging for sensible nosology but I fear DSM-V will be a great disappointment for all.

Neuroskeptic said...

ML,MD : I think Crazy Like Us is safely on the right side of the line that separates sanity from Szasz-ism. Watters never suggests or implies that psychiatrists are diagnosing people in order to control them for any kind of political reasons - and in general the whole thing is based on the assumption that people who get diagnosed feel themselves to be unwell, or distressed; he never says that people are being diagnosed just for behaving in unusual or nonconformist ways.

Now when it comes to this:

"Mental disorders, notwithstanding legitimate inquiry, are real, objective and culturally un-bound."

I think this is the interesting issue. Surely some mental disorders are culturally bound, like anorexia nervosa, which either didn't exist or was extremely rare before the modern era.

Now with things like mania and depression, there does seem to be a definite biological "core" to the condition - something must be happening in the brain when you're manic or depressed - but that doesn't mean that culture etc is irrelevant.

For example, take someone who's "mildly bipolar" or "cyclothymic" or whatever you want to call it - for genetic reasons, presumably. Lots of people are. Now in some times and places they would just be thought of as "temperamental" and they'd live life like that, successfully or not as the case might be... on the other hand though, in some cultures they might get a diagnosis of Bipolar II (or ADHD, or something). Now that diagnosis (if they accept it or are compelled to) is going to change the course of their life to a greater or lesser extent, and it'll change the way they think of themselves & the way others think of them (even apart from the possible effects of treatment) , maybe they'll consciously try to monitor and control their moods, or maybe they'll do the opposite and start to act really manic when they feel a bit hypo manic, because that's what they expect... and so on.

ML, MD said...

Neuroskeptic: I believe we are on the same page regarding core biological nature of mental disorder and culturally biased diagnoses.

The biology of disorders should not depend on culture; on the other hand, classification and diagnosis of the disorders might.

Things will change (for better, in my opinion) if (and when) we develop neurobiologically based clinical classification in place of hodge-podge of syndromes thrown into artificial categories by their incidental characteristics.

Neurobiologically speaking, there is little reason for anorexia, bulimia, and pica to be placed in the one group - Eating Disorders. They belong to the same category as much as tuberculosis, cystic fibrosis, and asthma belong to Lung Disorders (anatomically correct, but impractical).

Incidently, Anorexia Nervosa was described in 1556 in Mary Stewart, known as Mary, Queen of Scots. The “French Fasting Girl of Confolens,” was presented in 1613 by Pedro Mexio. There were several other cases described before 1873 when William Gull coined the name "Anorexia Nervosa".

A very curious description of the disorder one can find in the book of nursery rhymes by Heinrich Hoffmann Der Struwwelpeter (1845) translated into English three years later
http://www.fln.vcu.edu/struwwel/struwwel.html

Here is one of the poems:
The Story of Augustus who not have any Soup

Augustus was a chubby lad;
Fat ruddy cheeks Augustus had;
And everybody saw with joy
The plump and hearty healthy boy.
He ate and drank as he was told,
And never let his soup get cold.
But one day, one cold winter's day,
He threw away the spoon and screamed:
"O take the nasty soup away!
I won't have any soup to-day:
I will not, will not eat my soup!
I will not eat it, no!"

Next day! now look, the picture shows
How lank and lean Augustus grows!
Yet, though he feels so weak and ill,
The naughty fellow cries out stillÑ
"Not any soup for me, I say!
O take the nasty soup away!
I will not, will not eat my soup!
I will not eat it, no!"

The third day comes. O what a sin!
To make himself so pale and thin.
Yet, when the-soup is put on table,
He screams, as loud as he is ableÑ
"Not any soup for me, I say!
O take the nasty soup away!
I won't have any soup to-day!"

Look at him, now the fourth day's come!
He scarce outweighs a sugar-plum;

He's like a little bit of thread;
And on the fifth day he was-dead.

...............

I would suggest that the case, albeit boy's, is that of Anorexia Nervosa. You will also find in the book fairly accurate description of Conduct Disorder, ODD, ADHD with and without hyperactivity, pyromania, and a habit disorder.

Anonymous said...

ML,MD:
With all due respect, neurobiologically-speaking, there isn't a single replicated biological marker for any psychiatric illness (save for certain forms of mental retardation) known to mankind. Which is quite amazing when there are obvious candidates for illnesses that cry out for biological markers -- schizophrenia and bipolar 1 come most immediately to mind. The fact that these illness appear across cultures obviously speaks to a core species-specific (or biological) basis to these disorders. But other psychiatric illnesses are probably culturally influenced, both etiologically and phenomenologically. The various manifestations of depression, anxiety, conversion, eating disorders, and personality disorders would seem to fall into this later category. This is not to say that biology is not also a causative agent; rather, it is to argue that a biopsychocultural model has to be employed to fully understand (and treat) these conditions. Moreover, cultural factors are also relevant to the treatment of neurobiologically-based illnesses, such as schizophrenia. In this regard, I noticed that you did not comment on Watters' discussion of the well documented fact of better outcomes for schizophrenia treatment in third world and developing nations where family structure and cultural beliefs regarding "psychotic" phenomena help direct a less stigmatized and disenfranchised treatment of such afflicted people. Watters is no Szasz and I find your judgment that he comes close to or "borders on" the views of the Myth of Mental Illness champion naive and intellectually dishonest.

ML, MD said...

Easy, Anonymous. I 'll reply to your post in due course (presently, I am busy treating neurobiologically based disorders of my psychiatric patients) but please tone down that culturally-bound rhetoric.

Anonymous said...

No problem, ML. But only on the condition that you tone down your naive, reductionistic neurobiological nonsense.

ML, MD said...

That will do.

Frontier Psychiatrist said...

I've read this too - it's really good. The account of the Tsunami is nothing short of shocking.

Neuroskeptic said...

That was my favourite chapter as well. Although I'd be interested to hear what the PTSD experts concerned have to say in response.

ML, MD said...

To the Anonymous:

If knowledge can create problems, it is not through ignorance that we can solve them.
- Isaac Asimov

And I'll add: not through insolence either.

Anonymous said...

ML,MD:
You found my rejoinder rude? Why, I think it "bordered on, but didn't cross the line" of contempt. Similar to your claim that Watters' work "bordered on" the "lunacy" of Szasz! What's good for the goose is good for the gander! And while chastising my "insolence" you simply hurl another insult about my "ignorance?" Jeez... go back to treating your "neurobiological illnesses." I am sure you will find them somewhere. Thank God that you have a full arsenal of antidepressants available to carry out such a noble quest-- you know, those "placebo pills" that have recently been outed??? LOL.

Chris said...

pj - suggesting that the Euro-American system of the DSM is merely "providing a trans-cultural schema" shows that you have neglected to confront your own cultural privilege. People of your cultural group are seen as the norm, and therefore you see the DSM as cultureless. It's important to acknowledge the fact that we are all bound by our culture, and no analysis is value-free. The DSM is based on an individualist, rationalist culture, where psychopathology is seen to exist in the individual and mental illnesses are universal. I think it's important to be aware of that rather than indulging in cultural colonialism. For example, a man from Shenzhen complaining of neurasthenia (a Western term, by the way) does not have "Chinese depression", and it would be insulting to treat him as if he did.

ML, MD - the pretentiousness of your posts is overwhelming. Srsly. Perhaps you could step back and see Anonymous' comment as part of a discussion rather than a personal attack. I agree that anorexia nervosa has been documented (by Keel and Klump, if I recall correctly?) since mediaeval times. It also seems to occur in a large number of different cultures around the world. On the other hand, bulimia nervosa seems to be an modern artifact of the Western world, and only recently has been reported in Singapore and rural China.

Could you explain what you mean by "culturally bound rhetoric'? Anonymous mentions a place for biological models of mental illness, but points out that biological markers for psychiatric illnesses have not yet been found. You may believe that that will change, but it would be great if you could share your personal beliefs without insisting that they are based in fact.

I'm a Physicist with a Psychology doctorate, or a Psychologist with a Physics doctorate, however you want to look at it. I try to engage in "objective" truth seeking, but I don't for a moment pretend that there is any such thing. Physics is culturally bound. No matter how pure your research is, you'll have to report it in some language or another, none of which are direct translations of each other. Take a look at your epistemological viewpoint and see if you really believe that an objective truth can be observed and communicated in a field like Psychology.

I feel that many disorders may have an as-yet undiscovered biological basis. I think a causal relationship would be very difficult to determine, and risk factors would be a more appropriate description. Regardless, many disorders have meaning for the "sufferer", and it's important to respect that in treatment. I try not to impose my view of the world on clients, but it is not something that can be shed like a winter coat. I try to respect clients and allow them to define their identity and condition. Anything less is cultural rape.


Hey, Tiddles - pigeons are thattaway. Go get 'em.

ML, MD said...

Chris,
It was tedious to read your feeble comment (how's that for the pretentiousness of my posts. I'll also advise to read carefully my posts before jumping in. Srsly, you want your opinion to be respected, treat others accordingly.
Now, to the subject matter. You, the anonymous, and to much lesser degree the author of the book confused DISORDERS with DIAGNOSES. Diagnoses are culturally bound, diseases or disorders (an objective pathology) are not. Etiology (cause) of the disease might be in some cases culturally-bound, pathological process is not. We must have clarity in definitions.
Further on, biopsychosocial model is in disfavor and has been very effectively argued against, most recently in BJP. In my opinion, it is, paraphrasing our rampant anonymous, "intellectually dishonest" to equate social, psychological and biological etiology (!) for severe mental disorders.
The author (btw, in addition to reading his book, I also listened to one hour interview) while effectively and persuasively arguing for social foundations of psychiatric DIAGNOSES, also implies that we should question psychobiology of the DISORDERS. With latter I "srsly" disagree! There is no evidence that there is less schizophrenia in Africa, only that African schizophrenics are less likely to be diagnosed and are functioning better than their western counterparts. The author is implying lesser role of biology and larger of social influence in the disorder, this is why he "borders but doesn't cross" into Szasz's "heresy". As I expected, the book is interpreted in exact manner that I was afraid it would, whether or not that was the author's intent.
The Anonymous is not entirely incorrect stating "there isn't a single replicated biological marker for any psychiatric illness" He confuses illness and disease (the former is subjective) but I'll forgive him indiscretion. Of course there is no replicable biological marker, since illness is invariably a common pathway for multiple diseases. There is also no common replicable biological marker for excruciating headache. That doesn't make it culturally-bound, does it?
Few more points. You ask "if I really believe that an objective truth can be observed and communicated in a field like Psychology." I don't know because don't practice Psychology. I am a psychiatrist and my objective truth is not any different from that of an endocrinologist who treats diabetes. I only argued psychiatric diagnosis aspect of the book and not psychological interventions for identified patients, a topic of a separate discussion. Treatment controversies of PTSD alone deserve a separate internet web.
This discourse reminded me of an ancient story of Tower of Babel where the ambitious plans were abandoned because of miscommunication (using modern parlance). According to the story a deity mixed up the languages. I maintain it was utter reluctance on the part of the builders to learn and listen to each other, whether culturally or biologically bound. I hope that didn't strike you as pretentious. Cheerios!

Chris said...

ML, MD,

I respect your opinions, but don't expect the same courtesy from yourself. I would, however, appreciate if you limited any criticism to the content of my posts and refrain from making false inferences.

I see, you're a psychiatrist. The new alchemy. A rough collection of heuristics and "just so" stories. Asserting a (nebulous) biological aetiology (see? I knows that word too!) for mental disorder is in your interest, while offering no actual cause. If major depression was initially caused by a biochemical imbalance, it would be the problem of an endocrinologist. If it was a brain abnormality, a neuroscientist.

I appreciate that seeing psychiatry as a medical speciality akin to endocrinology is important to you, but a skeptical view is an important aspect of any science, and it would not necessarily take from the validity of your practice. While an endocrinologist can diagnose diabetes based on symptoms and plasma glucose levels, no equivalent exists for psychological disorders. Psychiatry is a very useful practice, but slavish loyalty does not benefit the field of study or yourself.

Well done for reading the book AND listening to the interview. Consider me suitably impressed.

You failed in any attempt to avoid pretentiousness, but never mind. Try making fun of me with my own tongue-in-cheek humour any time.

Anonymous said...

Wow... to be judged "not entirely incorrect" by the Oracle of ML is truly an honor! LOL. Sorry ML -- your rebuttal was 110% intellectual gibberish. I hope you didn't stay up all night penning such pretentious prose. Oh, and by the way, ML: Why do YOU oh wondrous intellect think that African schizophrenics function better than their Western counterparts? Do they receive better "neurobiological" treatment? Or is their "disease" less malignant?

ML, MD said...

Chris, you are obviously under erroneous assumption that I tailor my writings to please or, heaven forbid, impress you. I wish you a quick recovery from solipsistic malaise.

Calling psychiatry a new alchemy is cute. What does it make of psychology - a new religion?

True, there is no objective laboratory test to diagnose psychiatric disorders, but that doesn't make them any less real.

Diabetes (melitus or insipidus for that matter) existed and were well described before the diagnostic tests were invented. No one in 19th century would argue that diabetes existed, why do we argue about psychiatric diseases (some of them as deadly) in the 21st?

The answer to this rhetorical question is simple - psychoanalytical orthodoxy that refuses to accept biological nature of the DISEASES.

Biological psychiatry is the only hope for the humanity. After decades of psychoanalytical inaction and falsehoods, it deserves the chance to prove itself. And medications, a small part of psychiatry, will be more useful when (and if) we develop better understanding and classification of mental disorders.

We are not quite there yet, but doesn't mean that alternative concept - cultural and ethnic nature of psychiatric disorders deserves equal respect. Other than faulty tentative speculations, there is nothing to demonstrate veracity of psycho-ethnic-culturo-social model.

ML, MD said...

Anonymous, the reason African schizophrenics function better than their Western counterparts is ...

Ah, forget it.

Michael said...

I'm only half way through this book and while I have a lot of sympathy with the view the author is arguing for, I often feel he is supporting it more with rhetoric than with evidence.

The chapter on PTSD, while fascinating, doesn't seem to me to present anywhere near enough evidence to have the confidence the author does for his conclusions. And I think the same goes for the anorexia chapter.

While his conclusion that these conditions are culturally bound like hysterical paralysis is plausible, the alternative (that they are not so bound) seems equally as plausible.

That said, I'm enjoying the book and it's certainly making me think more about these issues.