@article{6845, keywords = {Adaptation, Psychological, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Attitude to Health, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Depressive Disorder, Female, Hospitals, Teaching, Humans, India, Interviews as Topic, leprosy, Male, Medicine, Traditional, Mental Health, Middle Aged, Patient Compliance, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Religion and Psychology, Tinea Versicolor, Vitiligo}, author = {Weiss M G and Doongaji D R and Siddhartha S and Wypij D and Pathare S and Bhatawdekar M and Bhave A and Sheth A and Fernandes R}, title = {The Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue (EMIC). Contribution to cross-cultural research methods from a study of leprosy and mental health.}, abstract = {

The Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue (EMIC) has been developed to elicit illness-related perceptions, beliefs, and practices in a cultural study of leprosy and mental health in Bombay. Leprosy is an especially appropriate disorder for studying the inter-relationship of culture, mental health and medical illness because of deeply rooted cultural meanings, the emotional burden, and underuse of effective therapy. Fifty per cent of 56 recently diagnosed leprosy out-patients, 37% of 19 controls with another stigmatised dermatological condition (vitiligo), but only 8% of 12 controls with a comparable non-stigmatised condition (tinea versicolor) met DSM-III-R criteria for an axis I depressive, anxiety or somatoform disorder. Belief in a humoral (traditional) cause of illness predicted better attendance at clinic.

}, year = {1992}, journal = {The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science}, volume = {160}, pages = {819-30}, month = {1992 Jun}, issn = {0007-1250}, doi = {10.1192/bjp.160.6.819}, language = {eng}, }