Do People In Other Cultures Experience As A Disease Or Illness In Western Culture

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How people in other cultures experience as a disease or illness might sound strange or funny to most Western orientated people. Anthropologists are researching a diversity of cultures, and they are finding some exotic diseases, for example, Koro, Hsieh-Ping or Amok. These are known as culture bound syndromes. The definition of culture bound syndrome is “view that affliction syndromes and treatments may be specific to particular cultures and thus not comparable as universal conditions” (Maupin. PowerPoint 10/2/2017).
However, in the Western society, we don’t realize that other cultures might think that some illnesses are a little strange as well. For instance, if a woman gets close to the end of her reproductive age, possibilities are that she hits menopause. She experiences hot flashes that she desperately tries to cover up. Additionally, when people have experienced a traumatic event or when they have returned from a conflicted zone, they might get diagnosed with PTSD. The question is, do people in other cultures experience the same symptoms as people in the West, or do they deal with the trauma in another way.
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During the 1960s, menopause did become stigmatized and was turned into a disease. There were 26 physiological and psychological symptoms, including alcoholism, wrinkles, and sagging breast. Luckily, big Pharma had the answer for this latest disease; they developed a synthetic estrogen. This was promoted as the new fountain of youth and beauty, especially, targeting the aging women. They make her feel ashamed that she is past her reproduction age, and the marketers make her believe that the slow decline has started. Sadly, this miracle cure also turned out to cause