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CHAPTER 1
Scope and Terminology
Mental Health and Mental Illness
The focus of this Supplement is on mental health and mental illness in racial
and ethnic minorities. Mental health and mental illness are not polar
opposites, but points on a continuum. Somewhere in the middle of that
continuum are “mental health problems,” which most people
have experienced at some point in their lives. The experience of feeling
low and dispirited in the face of a stressful job is a familiar example.
The boundaries between mental health problems and milder forms of mental
illness are often indistinct, just as they are in many other areas of
health. Yet at the far end of the continuum lie disabling mental illnesses
such as major depression, schizophrenia, and bipolar disorder. Left
untreated, these disorders erase any doubt as to their devastating potential.
The SGR offered general definitions of mental health, mental illness, and mental
health problems (Box 1–2). It described mental health as important
for personal well-being, family and interpersonal relationships, and
successful contributions to community or society. These are jeopardized
by mental health problems and mental illnesses.

Figure 1-1 illustrates the U.S. Population by Race and Hispanic Origin Census figures for 1990 and 2000, and provides projected figures for 2025.
Box 1–2
Mental Health The successful performance of mental
function, resulting in productive activities, fulfilling relationships
with other people, and the ability to adapt to change and to cope
with adversity.
Mental Illness The term that refers collectively to
all mental disorders, which are health conditions characterized by
alterations in thinking, mood, or behavior (or some combination thereof)
associated with distress and/or impaired functioning.
Mental Health Problems Signs and symptoms of insufficient
intensity or duration to meet the criteria for any mental disorder.
Source: DHHS (1999).
While these elements of mental health may be identifiable, mental health itself
is not easy to define more precisely because any definition is rooted
in value judgments that may vary across individuals and cultures. According
to a distinguished leader in the field of mental health, “Because
values differ across cultures as well as among some groups (and indeed
individuals) within a culture, the ideal of the uniformly acceptable
definition of [mental health] is illusory” (Cowen, 1994).
Mental illness refers collectively to all diagnosable mental disorders. Mental
disorders feature abnormalities in cognition, emotion or mood, and the
highest integrative aspects of human behavior, such as social inter-actions.
Depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, and other mental disorders are commonly
found in the U.S. population, affecting about 1 in 5 adults and children
(DHHS, 1999). The prevalence rates for mental disorders in U.S. adults
are presented in Table 1–1.
It would be helpful to be able to construct a similar table for racial and ethnic
minorities. The patterns of specific mental disorders could then be
compared between each minority group and the U.S. population as a whole.
Unfortunately, prevalence rates are not yet known for each mental
disorder within a given minority population. The studies published thus
far are not sufficiently nationally representative; however, such
nationally representative studies are currently in progress. Nevertheless,
this Supplement finds enough evidence from many smaller studies to conclude
that the overall rate of mental illness among minorities is similar
to the overall rate of about 21 percent across the U.S. population.
In short, the patterns of prevalence for specific mental disorders within
the overall rate may vary some-what, but the total prevalence
appears to be similar across populations living in community settings.9
Mental disorders reflect abnormal functioning of the brain. They alter mental
life and behavior by affecting the function of neurocircuits, the elaborate
pathways through which cells in the brain (neurons) communicate with one
another and with other parts of the body. The precise causes of most mental
disorders are not known; the broad forces that shape them are genetic,
psychological, social, and cultural, which interact in ways not yet fully
understood. The modern field of integrative neuroscience strives to explain
how genes and environment (broadly defined to include culture) work together
in a dynamic rather than a static manner to produce mental life and behavior.
The field focuses on many levels of investigation —molecular, cellular,
systems, and behavior — to uncover the basis for mental health and
mental illness. It does not separate nature from nurture, pitting them
against one another. Rather, the field examines their interaction, the
ways in which mental life and experience over time actually change the
structure and function of neurocircuits. Through learning and memories
that come with personal experience and socialization, neurocircuits are
sculpted and shaped throughout life (Kandel, 1998; Hyman, 2000) .
Race, Ethnicity, and Culture
Any report of this magnitude needs to define the major terms it uses, all the
more so when the terms are often controversial. The problem is that
precise definitions of the terms “race,” “ethnicity,”
and “culture” are elusive. As social concepts, they have
so many different meanings, and those meanings evolve over time. With
these caveats in mind, this section expands upon the general definitions
of these terms adopted by the SGR.
Race
Most people think of “race” as a biological category — as a
way to divide and label different groups according to a set of common
inborn biological traits (e.g., skin color, or shape of eyes, nose,
and face). Despite this popular view, there are no biological criteria
for dividing races into distinct categories (Lewontin, 1972; Owens &
King, 1999). No consistent racial groupings emerge when people are sorted
by physical and biological characteristics. For example, the epicanthic
eye fold that produces the so-called “Asian” eye shape is
shared by the !Kung San Bushmen, members of an African nomadic tribe.
The visible physical traits associated with race, such as hair and skin color,
are defined by a tiny fraction of our genes, and they do not reliably
differentiate between the social categories of race. As more is learned
about the 30,000 genes of the human genome, variations between groups
are being identified, such as in genes that code for the enzymes active
in drug metabolism (Chapter 2). While such information may prove to
have clinical utility, it is important to note that these variations
cannot be used to distinguish groups from one another as they are outweighed
by overwhelming genetic similarities across so-called racial groups
(Paabo, 2001).
The strongest, most compelling evidence to refute race as a biological category
comes from genetic analysis of different racial groups. There is overwhelmingly
greater genetic variation within a racial group than across racial groups.
One study examined the variation in 109 DNA regions that were known
to contain a high level of polymorphisms, or DNA sequence variations.
Published in one of the most respected scientific journals and in agreement
with earlier research, it found that 85 percent of human genetic diversity
is found within a given racial group (Barbujani et al., 1997).

Table 1-1 provides one-year prevalence rates among adults 18-54 for
selected mental disorders. These figures are drawn from the Epidemiologic Catchment Area study, the National Comorbidity Survey, and best estimates derived from the
two studies. This table was originally published in Mental Health: A Report of
the Surgeon General (DHHS, 1999)
Race is not a biological category, but it does have meaning as a social category.
Different cultures classify people into racial groups according to a
set of characteristics that are socially significant. The concept
of race is especially potent when certain social groups are separated,
treated as inferior or superior, and given differential access to power
and other valued resources. This is the definition adopted by this Supplement
because of its significance in understanding the mental health of racial
and ethnic minority groups in American society.
Ethnicity
Ethnicity refers to a common heritage shared by a particular group (Zenner, 1996).
Heritage includes similar history, language, rituals, and preferences
for music and foods. Historical experiences are so pivotal to under-standing
ethnic identity and current health status that they occupy the introductory
portion of each chapter covering a racial or ethnic group (Chapters
3–6).
The term “race,” when defined as a social category, may overlap with
ethnicity, but each has a different social meaning. For example, in
many national surveys and in the 1990 U.S. census, Native Hawaiians
and Vietnamese Americans are classified together in the racial category
of “Asian and Pacific Islander Americans.” Native Hawaiians,
however, have very little in common with Vietnamese Americans in terms
of their heritage. Similarly, Caribbean blacks and Pacific Northwest
Indians have different ethnicities than others within their same racial
category. And, as noted earlier, because Hispanics are an ethnicity,
not a race, the different Latino American ethnic subgroups such as Cubans,
Dominicans, Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and Peruvians include individuals
of all races.
Culture
Culture is broadly defined as a common heritage or set of beliefs, norms, and
values (DHHS, 1999). It refers to the shared, and largely learned, attributes
of a group of people. Anthropologists often describe culture as a system
of shared meanings. People who are placed, either by census categories
or through self-identification, into the same racial or ethnic group
are often assumed to share the same culture. Yet this assumption is
an over-generalization because not all members grouped together in a
given category will share the same culture. Many may identify with other
social groups to which they feel a stronger cultural tie such as being
Catholic, Texan, teenaged, or gay.
Culture is as applicable to groups of whites, such as Irish Americans or German
Americans, as it is to racial and ethnic minorities. As noted, the term
“culture” is also applicable to the shared values, beliefs,
and norms established in common social groupings, such as adults trained
in the same profession or youth who belong to a gang. The culture of
clinicians, for example, is discussed in Chapter 2 to help explain interactions
between patients and clinicians.
The phrase “cultural identity” refers to the culture with which someone
identifies and to which he or she looks for standards of behavior (Cooper
& Denner, 1998). Given the variety of ways in which to define a
cultural group, many people consider themselves to have multiple cultural
identities.
A key aspect of any culture is that it is dynamic: Culture continually changes
and is influenced both by people’s beliefs and the demands of
their environment (Lopez & Guarnaccia, 2000). Immigrants from different
parts of the world arrive in the United States with their own culture
but gradually begin to adapt. The term “acculturation” refers
to the socialization process by which minority groups gradually learn
and adopt selective elements of the dominant culture. Yet that dominant
culture is itself transformed by its interaction with minority groups.
And, to make matters more complex, the immigrant group may form its
own culture, distinct from both its country of origin and the dominant
culture. The Chinatowns of major cities in the United States often exemplify
the blending of Chinese traditions and an American context.
The dominant culture for much of U.S. history has centered on the beliefs, norms,
and values of white Americans of Judeo-Christian origin, but today’s
America is much more multicultural in character. Still, its societal
institutions, including those that educate and train mental health professionals,
have been shaped by white American culture and, in a broader characterization,
Western culture. That cultural legacy has left its imprint on how mental
health professionals respond to patients in all facets of care, beginning
with their very first encounter, the diagnostic interview.
Diagnosis and Culture
Western medicine has become a cornerstone of health worldwide because it is based
on evidence from scientific research. A hallmark of Western medicine
is its reliance on accurate diagnosis, the identification and classification
of disease. An accurate diagnosis dictates the type of treatment and
supportive care, and it sheds light on prognosis and course of illness.
The diagnosis of a mental disorder is arguably more difficult than diagnoses
in other areas of medicine and health because there are usually no definitive
lesions (pathological abnormalities) or laboratory tests. Rather, a
diagnosis depends on a pattern, or clustering, of symptoms (i.e., subjective
complaints), observable signs, and behavior associated with distress
or disability. Disability is impairment in one or more areas of functioning
at home, work, school, or in the community (American Psychiatric Association
[APA], 1994).
The formal diagnosis of a mental disorder is made by a clinician and hinges upon
three components: a patient’s description of the nature, intensity,
and duration of symptoms; signs from a mental status examination; and
a clinician’s observation and interpretation of the patient’s
behavior, including functional impairment. The final diagnosis rests
on the clinician’s judgment about whether the patient’s
signs, symptom patterns, and impairments of functioning meet the criteria
for a given diagnosis. The American Psychiatric Association sets forth
those diagnostic criteria in a standard manual known as the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. This is the most
widely used classification system, both nationally and internationally,
for teaching, research, and clinical practice (Maser et al., 1991).
Mental disorders are found worldwide. Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, panic
disorder, and depression have similar symptom profiles across several
continents (Weissman et al., 1994, 1996, 1997, 1998). Yet diagnosis
can be extremely challenging, even to the most gifted clinicians, because
the manifestations of mental disorders and other physical disorders
vary with age, gender, race, ethnicity, and culture. Take some of the
symptoms of depression — persistent sadness or despair, hopelessness,
social withdrawal — and imagine the difficulty of communication
and interpretation with-in a culture, much less from one culture to
another. The challenge rests not only with the patient, but also with
the clinician, as well as with their dynamic interactions. Patients
from one culture may manifest and communicate symptoms in a way poorly
understood in the culture of the clinician. Consider that words such
as “depressed” and “anxious” are absent from
the languages of some American Indians and Alaska Natives (Manson et
al., 1985). However, this does not preclude them from having depression
or anxiety.
To arrive at a diagnosis, clinicians must determine whether patients’ signs
and symptoms significantly impair their functioning at home, school,
work, and in their communities. This judgment is based on deviation
from social norms (cultural standards of acceptable behavior) (Scadding,
1996). For example, among some cultural groups, perceiving visions or
voices of religious figures might be part of normal religious experience
on some occasions and aberrant social functioning on other occasions.
It becomes obvious that the interaction between clinician and patient
is rife with possibilities for miscommunication and misunderstanding
when they are from different cultures. According to the American Psychiatric
Diagnostic assessment can be especially challenging when a clinician
from one ethnic or cultural group uses the DSM–IV Classification
to evaluate an individual from a different ethnic or cultural
group. A clinician who is unfamiliar with the nuances of an individual’s
cultural frame of reference may incorrectly judge as psychopathology
those normal variations in behavior, beliefs, or experience that
are particular to the individual’s culture. (APA, 1994)
The multifaceted ways that culture influences mental illness and mental health
services are discussed at length in Chapter 2.
The issuance in 1994 of the fourth edition of the (DSM–IV) marked a new
level of acknowledgment of the role of culture in shaping the symptom
presentation, expression, and course of mental disorders. Whereas prior
editions referred to such matters only in passing, this edition specifically
included some discussion of cultural variations in the clinical presentation
of each DSM–IV disorder, a glossary of some idioms of distress
and “culture-bound syndromes” (Box 1–3), and a brief
outline to assist the clinician in formulating the cultural dimensions
for an individual patient (APA, 1994).
The “Outline for Cultural Formulation” in DSM–IV systematically
calls attention to five distinct aspects of the cultural context of
illness and their relevance to diagnosis and care. The clinician is
encouraged to:
Box 1–3: Idioms of Distress and Culture-Bound Syndromes
Idioms of distress are ways in which different cultures
express, experience, and cope with feelings of distress. One example
is somatization, or the expression of distress through physical
symptoms (Kirmayer & Young, 1998). Stomach disturbances, excessive
gas, palpitations, and chest pain are common forms of somatization
in Puerto Ricans, Mexican Americans, and whites (Escobar et al.,
1987). Some Asian groups express more cardiopulmonary and vestibular
symptoms, such as dizziness, vertigo, and blurred vision (Hsu &
Folstein, 1997). In Africa and South Asia, somatization sometimes
takes the form of burning hands and feet, or the experience of worms
in the head or ants crawling under the skin (APA, 1994).
Culture-bound syndromes are clusters of symptoms much
more common in some cultures than in others. For example, some Latino
patients, especially women from the Caribbean, display ataque de
nervios, a condition that includes screaming uncontrollably, attacks
of crying, trembling, and verbal or physical aggression. Fainting
or seizure-like episodes and suicidal gestures may sometimes accompany
these symptoms (Guarnaccia et al., 1993). A culture-bound syndrome
from Japan is taijin kyofusho, an intense fear that one’s
body or bodily functions give offense to others. This syndrome is
listed as a diagnosis in the Japanese clinical modification of the
World Health Organization (WHO) International Classification of Diseases,
10th edition (1993).
Numerous other culture-bound syndromes are given in the DSM–IV “Glossary
of Culture-Bound Syndromes.” Researchers have taken initial steps
to examine the interrelationships between culture-bound syndromes and
the diagnostic classifications of DSM–IV. For example, in a sample
of Latinos seeking care for anxiety disorders, 70 percent reported having
at least one ataque. Of those, over 40 percent met DSM–IV
criteria for panic disorder, and nearly 25 percent met criteria for
major depression (Liebowitz et al., 1994). In past research, there has
been an effort to fit culture-bound syndromes into variants of DSM diagnoses.
Rather than assume that DSM diagnostic entities or culture-bound syndromes
are the basic patterns of illness, current investigators are interested
in examining how the social, cultural, and biological contexts interact
to shape illnesses and reactions to them. This is an important area
of research in a field known as cultural psychiatry or ethnopsychiatry.
(1) Inquire about patients’ cultural identity to determine
their ethnic or cultural reference group, language abilities, language
use, and language preference,
(2) Explore possible cultural explanations of the illness,
including patients’ idioms of distress, the meaning and perceived
severity of their symptoms in relation to the norms of the patients’
cultural reference group, and their cur-rent preferences for, as well
as past experiences with, professional and popular sources of care,
(3) Consider cultural factors related to the psychosocial environment
and levels of functioning. This assessment includes culturally
relevant interpretations of social stressors, available support, and
levels of functioning, as well as patients’ disability,
(4) Critically examine cultural elements in the patient-clinician
relationship to determine differences in culture and social status
between them and how those differences affect the clinical encounter,
ranging from communication to rapport and disclosure,
(5) Render an overall cultural assessment for diagnosis and care,
meaning that the clinician synthesizes all of the information to determine
a course of care.
The “Outline for Cultural Formulation” has been heralded as a major
step forward, but with limitations related to its scope, depth, and
placement in an appendix (see review in Lopez & Guarnaccia, 2000).
Because major areas were omitted in the final version of the Outline,
some assert that the scope is too narrow to reflect the dynamic role
of culture in mental health problems and disorders (Lewis-Fernandez
& Kleinman, 1995; Mezzich et al., 1999).
Other mental health experts point out that the discussion of idioms of distress
is too limited and fails to capture their nuances, from their everyday
meanings within a culture to their significance as symptoms of distress
and their possible application to many different disorders across cultures
(Kirmayer & Young, 1998; see also Chapter 6). Finally, placement
of the Outline in an appendix is seen as marginalizing the role of culture,
instead of appreciating its multifaceted roles across all mental disorders
and cultures, including white American culture.
In recognition of the evolving nature of diagnosis, the American Psychiatric
Association has an explicit revision process for DSM, which is updated
roughly every 10 years to achieve greater objectivity, diagnostic precision,
and diagnostic reliability in light of new empirical findings and field
testing. Limitations of the current cultural formulation are expected
to be addressed in future revisions of DSM. Interest in the role of
culture in mental health and mental illness is consistent with the broader
trend in neuroscience and genetics, integrative neuroscience.
This field strives to explain the powerful effect of experience, in
the broadest possible sense, on the structure and function of the brain.
Leaders in the field envision that the study of genes and their interaction
with the environment will yield new boundaries between mental disorders,
which now are divided mostly on the basis of symptom clusters, course
of illness, response to treatment, and family history (Hyman, 2000).
9 Except as noted in Chapter 2 regarding the lack of data
for some ethnic groups.
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