Publication | Closed Access
“Ode Ori”: A culture‐bound disorder with prominent somatic features in Yoruba Nigerian patients
46
Citations
17
References
1987
Year
Common Dsm‐iii DiagnosesCulture‐bound DisorderYoruba Nigerian PatientsEducationSomatic Symptom DisorderMedical AnthropologyNeurologyAbstract— Thirty PatientsTraditional MedicinePsychiatryProminent Somatic FeaturesClinical DisordersCultureCultural PsychiatryAnthropologyMedicineAnxiety DisordersPsychopathologyComplementary Medicine
ABSTRACT— Thirty patients diagnosed by Nigerian Yoruba traditional healers as suffering from a condition termed “Ode Ori” are described. The chief complaints were of a crawling sensation in the head and body, noises in the ears, palpitations and various other somatic complaints. Anxiety and depressive symptoms were prominent in all the patients and indeed the most common DSM‐III diagnoses were of depressive and anxiety disorders. The significance of the disorder and its features is discussed in the context of the socio‐cultural background of the patients.
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