User:Hyperkill1/practice

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"'Zar'" is a culture -bound syndrome prevalent among societies in North Africa and the Middle East. The phenomenon of the occurrence of individual spirit possession is not locally seen as pathological. Sufferers appear to be possessed by a spirit. They are almost always women.

Common Locations[edit]

Zar is most commonly found in the Middle East and North Africa in countries such as Sudan, Egypt, Ehtiopia, Somolia, Algeria, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, and Iran. It is also found in Nigeria, Kenya, Tanzania, and Zambia.

Risk Factors[edit]

Those diagnosed with Zar are predominately middle-aged females with enduring socio-economic, psychological, and interpersonal problems. Sufferers and their spouses are often poorly educated, reside in rural areas, and also suffer from another non-psychotic mental disorder. These women have often been divorced, or have remained single for long periods of time, or may have never gotten married, which could indicate a cultural factor in the disorder in which social ostracism may play a part. They are more likely to suffer from conversion disorders, anxiety disorders, and mood disorders.

Symptoms[edit]

Zar is characterized by periods of uncontrollable shouting, laughing, crying, singing, or banging of the head against a wall. Those suffering from Zar may seem apathetic or withdrawn, refusing to eat or perform their usual daily activities.




References[edit]

http://www.csun.edu/~hcpsy002/Nevid_ch03.pdf

http://anthro.palomar.edu/medical/med_4.htm

http://www.as.ua.edu/ant/reprints/843.pdf

http://faculty.valpo.edu/jnelson/CCWebPage/Notes/CBPPOL.html</ref>>http://www.fcas.nova.edu/faculty/publications/quadrivium/issue1/mental_illness/index.cfm

http://www.anthropology.northwestern.edu/faculty/documents/CMPpaper-RSandLJK.pdf

http://monuni.academia.edu/HaslinaMuhamad/Papers/1089407/The_Relation_of_Personality_to_Subjective_Well-Being_in_Malaysian_Youths

http://www.psychforums.com/anti-psych/topic7386.html

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/10/magazine/10psyche-t.html?pagewanted=all

Rahim, Abdel (1999). Zar Culture and Psychopathology. Accessed March 27, 2012 from Current Psychiatry, Vol 6(2)[http://psychiatry-research-eg.com/texts/current- psychiatry-v6n2-99/c2aba6.PDF]