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Idioms of distress: Somatic responses to distress in everyday life
Authors:Claire D.F. Parsons  Pat Wakeley
Affiliation:(1) Centre for Research in Public Health & Nursing, LaTrobe University, Melbourne, Australia;(2) Department of Sociology, University of Newcastle, Australia
Abstract:In-depth interviews were conducted among 50 subjects residing in the industrial town of Newcastle, Australia. Half of these subjects were from the general population and half were currently seeking counselling for personal/family problems. None of the subjects were receiving any medical care at the time of interview, though seven had done so during the episode of distress they were discussing. The study shows that while the subjects psychologized their lsquoproblemsrsquo, members of both groups tended to somatize at a rate proportional to the level of distress. Subjects were unaware of any relationship between the distress they were experiencing and their physical complaints. The results of this study support previous research which argues that those experiencing distress and those who tend to introspect are also those who are likely to amplify somatic symptoms. At the same time these results depart from findings in the United States which suggest that in the West, people learn to express social and personal distress in psychological terms,, thereby reducing the level of somatization. Though not representative of the population as a whole, the findings raised questions warranting further study.
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