Schizophrenia Shaped by Culture

Natalie Astrid
2 min readJun 14, 2022

What we can learn from Eastern cultures about treating Schizophrenia

Photo by Camila Quintero Franco on Unsplash

In the article, Hallucinatory ‘voices’ shaped by local culture, a Stanford anthropologist states the difference between Western and Eastern cultures when viewing the voices that people with Schizophrenia experience. The study found that people from Africa and India had a much more positive experience when hearing the voices in their heads sometimes; they even listened to the voices of family members. This was compared to Americans who had more negative experiences when they heard the voices in their head due to viewing the voice as a medical problem.

The lack of connection to the voice in their head caused Americans to have more troubling and traumatic experiences with their voices compared to Eastern cultures that connected the voice to more positive experiences of hearing God or a guiding voice. This difference in point of view shows that the encouragement of spirituality and the change in perspective about the voices people experience with Schizophrenia can cause people to have more pleasant experiences with their voices.

Additionally, many Eastern cultures tend to be more accepting of the idea of spirituality intertwined with medical practices. This difference can change the perspective of the voice to be viewed less as an intrusion that needs to be fixed and more…

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Natalie Astrid

Theatre and Film creator, Marriage and Family therapy student, and girl just trying her best.