Article contents
I. Relationship Between the Neuroses and Brief Reactive Psychosis: Descriptive Case Studies in Africa
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 August 2018
Abstract
Predominant psychopathology in a selected population group - adolescents and young adults at school - in a developing country, is described. The highly selective referral to services was supplemented by active case finding in the community over three years. There were 54 cases of somaticised anxiety (brain fag); 22 cases of depressive neurosis characterised by hypochondriasis, cognitive complaints, and culturally determined paranoid ideation; 23 cases of ‘hysteria’ in the form of dissociative states, pseudoseizures and fugues; and 39 cases of brief reactive psychosis which differed from the dissociative states more in duration and intensity than in form. There was a temporal relationship between transient psychosis and the school calendar. Anxiety or depression often predated the florid psychotic reaction which served as a form of help-seeking behaviour or defence in intolerable stress.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- The British Journal of Psychiatry , Volume 160 , Issue S16: Patterns of Mental Illness in the Early Stages of Urbanisation , April 1992 , pp. 12 - 23
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists
- 13
- Cited by
eLetters
No eLetters have been published for this article.