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Exploring the association between depression and shenjing shuairuo in a population representative epidemiological study of Chinese adults in Guangzhou, China
Hall, Brian J.1,2,3; Chang, Kay1,4; Chen, Wen5; Sou, Ka Lon1; Latkin, Carl3; Yeung, Albert6
2018-12
Source PublicationTRANSCULTURAL PSYCHIATRY
ISSN1363-4615
Volume55Issue:6Pages:733-753
Abstract

Traditional mental illness concepts remain prevalent in China. Shenjing shuairuo (i.e., neurasthenia), a depressive-like syndrome less favored in Western psychiatric nosology, has a long tradition of acceptance among Chinese lay people. The concept may be more easily accepted in China due to the culturally informed view of the importance of harmony between mind and body and is consistent with Traditional Chinese Medicine. The goals of this study were to estimate the prevalence of shenjing shuairuo, the overlap between shenjing shuairuo and depression, and whether these two disorders share correlates. Data was obtained from 751 Chinese adults using stratified random sampling. Spatial epidemiological methods were utilized with face-to-face interviews conducted in Guangzhou, China. The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) and the neurasthenia criteria from ICD-10 measured depression and shenjing shuairuo. The prevalence of depression and shenjing shuairuo were 5.3% and 15.4%, respectively. Participants with depression were nearly six times more likely to have shenjing shuairuo. Women were more likely than men to have comorbid depression and shenjing shuairuo. Poorer health was reported across disorders. Those with shenjing shuairuo were more likely to report medical diagnoses. Longer sleep latency was reported for those with shenjing shuairuo and those with depression reported fewer hours of sleep and lower sleep quality. Those with depression alone reported the poorest sleep. Significant diagnostic overlap and few distinct correlates were observed. Nevertheless, the difference in prevalence and acceptance among non-professionals suggests that shenjing shuairuo is a useful category of distress among Chinese adults in Southern China.

KeywordChinese Culture Bound Syndrome Depression Neurasthenia Shenjing Shuairuo
DOI10.1177/1363461518778670
URLView the original
Indexed BySSCI
Language英語English
WOS Research AreaAnthropology ; Psychiatry
WOS SubjectAnthropology ; Psychiatry
WOS IDWOS:000448264400001
PublisherSAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
Scopus ID2-s2.0-85047948563
Fulltext Access
Citation statistics
Document TypeJournal article
CollectionUniversity of Macau
Affiliation1.Univ Macau, Global & Community Mental Hlth Res Grp, Taipa, Macau, Peoples R China;
2.Univ Macau, Dept Psychol, Taipa, Macau, Peoples R China;
3.Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Behav & Soc, Baltimore, MD USA;
4.Univ Macau, Psychol, Taipa, Macau, Peoples R China;
5.Sun Yat Sen Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Med Stat & Epidemiol, Guangzhou, Guangdong, Peoples R China;
6.Harvard Med Sch, Psychiat, Boston, MA USA
First Author AffilicationUniversity of Macau
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Hall, Brian J.,Chang, Kay,Chen, Wen,et al. Exploring the association between depression and shenjing shuairuo in a population representative epidemiological study of Chinese adults in Guangzhou, China[J]. TRANSCULTURAL PSYCHIATRY, 2018, 55(6), 733-753.
APA Hall, Brian J.., Chang, Kay., Chen, Wen., Sou, Ka Lon., Latkin, Carl., & Yeung, Albert (2018). Exploring the association between depression and shenjing shuairuo in a population representative epidemiological study of Chinese adults in Guangzhou, China. TRANSCULTURAL PSYCHIATRY, 55(6), 733-753.
MLA Hall, Brian J.,et al."Exploring the association between depression and shenjing shuairuo in a population representative epidemiological study of Chinese adults in Guangzhou, China".TRANSCULTURAL PSYCHIATRY 55.6(2018):733-753.
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