Cultural Formulation in Psychiatry

Cultural Formulation in Psychiatry

Cultural Formulation in Psychiatry

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Intro to Cultural Psychiatry - Culture & Mind Matters

  • Cultural Psychiatry: How culture influences mental health, illness, and treatment.
  • Cultural Competence: Effective interaction with diverse cultures.
  • Cultural Humility: Lifelong self-reflection, addressing power dynamics.
  • Importance: Crucial for accurate diagnosis and patient-centered management.
  • Ethnocentrism: Judging others by one's own cultural standards (often as superior).
  • Cultural Relativism: Understanding behaviors within their cultural context.

⭐ Cultural factors significantly impact help-seeking, symptom expression, and treatment adherence.

Cultural Formulation Interview - Asking Right Questions

The Cultural Formulation Interview (CFI) is a semi-structured, person-centered tool from DSM-5 Section III. It uses 16 questions to explore the patient's cultural perspective.

  • Purpose: Elicits information for cultural formulation, aiding diagnosis and treatment.
  • Core Structure: 16 questions across 4 domains: 📌 Doctors Prefer Systematic Care.
    • Cultural Definition of the Problem
    • Cultural Perceptions of Cause, Context, and Support
    • Cultural Factors Affecting Self-Coping and Past Help Seeking
    • Cultural Factors Affecting Current Help Seeking
  • Versions:
    • Core CFI (patient)
    • Informant Version (family/caregivers)
    • Supplementary Modules (12 modules for specific populations/issues)

⭐ The CFI is not a diagnostic tool but facilitates culturally sensitive assessment and engagement, improving therapeutic alliance and outcomes by incorporating the patient's cultural context into care planning.

DSM-5 Cultural Formulation - Culture's Core Domains

A framework to integrate cultural factors into clinical assessment and care, using 5 core domains. 📌 Mnemonic: I Can See Real Outcomes (Identity, Conceptualizations, Stressors, Relationship, Overall)

  • 1. Cultural Identity of the Individual:
    • Person's ethnic/cultural background, language, religion, social supports.
    • Degree of involvement with culture of origin vs. host culture.
  • 2. Cultural Conceptualizations of Distress:
    • How culture shapes experience, expression, and understanding of symptoms.
    • Includes cultural idioms of distress (e.g., "sinking heart"), explanatory models.
  • 3. Psychosocial Stressors & Cultural Features of Vulnerability/Resilience:
    • Culturally relevant stressors (e.g., discrimination, migration).
    • Cultural sources of support and coping (e.g., family, religion).
  • 4. Cultural Features of Clinician-Patient Relationship:
    • Impact of cultural differences on communication, trust, rapport.
    • Patient's preferences and expectations for care.
  • 5. Overall Cultural Assessment:
    • Summary of domains 1-4 to inform diagnosis and treatment.
    • Develops a culturally sensitive care plan.

⭐ Explanatory models, part of Domain 2, explore how patients understand the cause, course, and appropriate treatment for their illness.

Indian Context & Syndromes - Desi Perspectives

  • Key Indian CCDs:
    SyndromeCore Feature(s)
    Dhat syndromeAnxiety over semen loss; weakness, fatigue
    KoroAcute anxiety; fear of genital retraction
    SannipatDelirium-like state (Ayurvedic: Tri-doshic imbalance)
    Possession SyndromesBelief in spirit/entity intrusion; altered behavior
  • Help-Seeking: Sociocultural Factors:
    • Family: Central role in decisions, illness perception.
    • Religion/Spirituality: Provides explanatory models, coping mechanisms.
    • Stigma: Major barrier to accessing psychiatric care.
  • Clinical Adaptation:
    • Traditional Healers: First contact; explore collaboration.
    • Intervention: Culturally sensitive communication, family involvement.

⭐ Dhat syndrome is most common in young South Asian males, linked to cultural beliefs about vital fluid loss (semen).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • DSM-5 Cultural Formulation assesses 5 key areas including cultural identity, distress conceptualization, and psychosocial environment.
  • The Cultural Formulation Interview (CFI), with 16 questions over 4 domains, operationalizes this assessment.
  • CFI domains cover: cultural problem definition, perceptions of cause/support, coping/past help, and current help-seeking.
  • Improves diagnostic accuracy, reduces bias, and enhances therapeutic alliance.
  • Elicits patient's explanatory models of illness, guiding culturally sensitive care.
  • Vital for understanding somatization, addressing stigma, and improving treatment adherence in diverse populations.
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Practice Questions: Cultural Formulation in Psychiatry

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All are provisions of WHO mental health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP), except:

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Flashcards: Cultural Formulation in Psychiatry

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_____ is a specific type of acculturation strategy characterized by integrating others' cultures

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_____ is a specific type of acculturation strategy characterized by integrating others' cultures

Integration

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