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Dissociative Symptoms and Reported Trauma Among Patients with Spirit Possession and Matched Healthy Controls in Uganda
Authors:Marjolein van Duijl  Ellert Nijenhuis  Ivan H. Komproe  Hajo B. P. E. Gernaat  Joop T. de Jong
Affiliation:(1) Clinic for Refugees at Center 45, Oegstgeest, The Netherlands;(2) Foundation Arq Psychotrauma Research, Diemen, The Netherlands;(3) Top Referent Trauma Center GGZ Drenthe, Assen, The Netherlands;(4) HealthNet TPO, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;(5) Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands;(6) Department of Psychiatry, Diaconessenhuis, Meppel, The Netherlands;(7) Cultural and International Psychiatry, VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;(8) Department of Psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA;(9) Center 45, Rijnzichtweg 35, 2342 AX Oegstgeest, The Netherlands
Abstract:Spirit possession is a common, worldwide phenomenon with dissociative features. Studies in Europe and the United States have revealed associations among psychoform and somatoform dissociation and (reported) potential traumatic events. The aim of this study was to explore the relationships among spirit possession, dissociative symptoms and reported potentially traumatizing events in Uganda. One hundred nineteen persons with spirit possession, diagnosed by traditional healers, were compared to a matched control group of 71 nonpossessed persons. Assessments included demographic items and measures of dissociation and potentially traumatizing events. Compared to the nonpossessed group, the possessed group reported more severe psychoform dissociation and somatoform dissociation and more potentially traumatizing events. The associations between these events and both types of dissociation were significant. Yet, consistent with the cultural perception of dissociative symptoms, the participants subjectively did not associate dissociative symptoms with potentially traumatizing events. In conclusion, spirit possession deserves more interest as a possible idiom of distress and a culture-specific expression of dissociation related to potential traumatizing events.
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