Background: Somatization refers to the tendency to emphasize somatic symptoms when experiencing a psychiatric disturbance. This tendency has been widely reported in patients from East Asian cultural contexts suffering from depression. Recent research in two Chinese samples have demonstrated that the local cultural script for depression, involving two aspects—the experience and expression of distress (EED) and conceptualization and communication of distress (CCD)—can be evoked to help explain somatization. Given the beliefs and practices broadly shared across Chinese and South Korean cultural contexts, the current study seeks to replicate this explanatory model in South Koreans. Methods: Our sample included 209 psychiatric outpatients f...
Previous studies have pointed out the comorbidity of somatization and depression among non-Western p...
BACKGROUND: According to published reports, the prevalence rates of major depressive disorder (MDD) ...
According to experts in the field of crosscultural psychology (e.g., Draguns, 1987; Kleinman & Good,...
BACKGROUND: Somatization refers to the tendency to emphasize somatic symptoms when experiencing a ps...
“Chinese somatization” has been frequently discussed over the past three decades of cultural psychia...
The expectation that Chinese individuals tend to present distress in a somatic way, through physical...
Epidemiological studies show that China has a lower prevalence rate of major depression than that of...
This paper describes the developing area of cultural psychopathology, an interdisciplinary field of ...
We believe that the application of a culture–mind– brain perspective to Chinese somatization opens u...
Decades of cross-cultural research have documented a distinctive form of psychopathology among depre...
The present research interrogates the greater tendency for Chinese people to somaticize depression r...
To examine the different understandings of depression between Chinese and Americans, we employed con...
This paper reviews the current cross-cultural studies on depression among Chinese people. Compared w...
Even before the term “somatization” was coined to describe the tendency to experience psychological ...
Despite the immense volume of depression literature, there are significant gaps of knowledge in depr...
Previous studies have pointed out the comorbidity of somatization and depression among non-Western p...
BACKGROUND: According to published reports, the prevalence rates of major depressive disorder (MDD) ...
According to experts in the field of crosscultural psychology (e.g., Draguns, 1987; Kleinman & Good,...
BACKGROUND: Somatization refers to the tendency to emphasize somatic symptoms when experiencing a ps...
“Chinese somatization” has been frequently discussed over the past three decades of cultural psychia...
The expectation that Chinese individuals tend to present distress in a somatic way, through physical...
Epidemiological studies show that China has a lower prevalence rate of major depression than that of...
This paper describes the developing area of cultural psychopathology, an interdisciplinary field of ...
We believe that the application of a culture–mind– brain perspective to Chinese somatization opens u...
Decades of cross-cultural research have documented a distinctive form of psychopathology among depre...
The present research interrogates the greater tendency for Chinese people to somaticize depression r...
To examine the different understandings of depression between Chinese and Americans, we employed con...
This paper reviews the current cross-cultural studies on depression among Chinese people. Compared w...
Even before the term “somatization” was coined to describe the tendency to experience psychological ...
Despite the immense volume of depression literature, there are significant gaps of knowledge in depr...
Previous studies have pointed out the comorbidity of somatization and depression among non-Western p...
BACKGROUND: According to published reports, the prevalence rates of major depressive disorder (MDD) ...
According to experts in the field of crosscultural psychology (e.g., Draguns, 1987; Kleinman & Good,...