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Thomas
Stompe, M.D.
Austria
At first sight, the
interest of an Austrian in cultural psychiatry seems to be hard to
explain. Although Austria has a certain tradition in anthropology (the
school of Father Wilhelm Schmidt), - having no indigenous populations
and no colonies - it has not developed a tradition in culture
psychiatry.
So this interest must
have evolved along other - atypical - pathways. Since my pre-school
years I was fascinated by old or "strange" cultures, a
fascination that has stayed with me my whole life. After finishing
school, I first planned to study cultural history, but after a few
months time to think about my professional future, I decided to study
medicine, knowing even then that I wanted to become a psychiatrist.
When I started
medical school in Vienna, psychiatry was for me a synonym for
psychoanalysis. Reading (more or less) the complete works of Sigmund
Freud, Totem and Taboo made me curious, but also left me feeling
helpless. During the next several years, I was preoccupied with books by
Mario Erdheim, Paul Parin, Paul Morgenthaler and Maya Nadig, relating
psychoanalysis to anthropology, and planned to undertake research in
ethno-psychoanalysis in the future. So, after my graduation in medicine,
I started my training at the Psychiatric Clinic of Vienna University. At
the same time, I began to study anthropology and undertook my own
psychoanalysis.
From 1989-1991, I
spent three years of my training in a rehabilitation centre for
schizophrenic patients, an experience which has had an ongoing influence
on my professional and scientific career. Dealing with these patients
stimulated my interest in the psychopathology of psychoses; an interest,
which has continued to motivate my clinical and research activity ever
since.
In 1990, I met Dr
Haroon Chaudhry from the University Clinic in Lahore, Pakistan. He has
completed part of his training in psychiatry at the University Clinic in
Vienna. In 1992 we decided to establish the "Vienna research group
in cultural psychiatry". During the following years, I have been
able to visit Pakistan four times, to coordinate our collaborative
research projects.
Our first published
research findings generated considerable interest in the scientific
community. Our collaborative research group has expanded over the years,
and now comprises psychiatrists from eight countries; Austria, Poland,
Lithuania, Georgia, Pakistan, Ghana, Nigeria, and Namibia.
Since 1994, I have
been working in close cooperation with Dr Alexander Friedmann, head of
the Transcultural Outpatient Department of the Psychiatry Clinic of
Vienna University, who is mainly treating psychiatric disorders among
refugees and migrants from former Yugoslavia, the former USSR, Turkey,
and Sub-Saharan Africa.
Since 1994, I spend
half of my working time at the High Security Göllersdorf, Hospital, a
facility for mentally ill offenders deemed to be not guilty by reason of
insanity. Under the influence of my mentor, Dr Hans Schanda, the head of
the High Security Hospital, forensic psychiatry has become an important
part of my scientific interests.
Following an
invitation from Dr Haroon Chaudhry to come to Lahore in 1995, I attended
my first annual meeting of the WPA-Transcultural Psychiatry Section. In
1997, I met Dr Goffredo Bartocci, with whom I share a fascination in
religious issues in cultural psychiatry. As a consequence, I became a
"natural" part of the transcultural psychiatry conferences
organized by him after that first meeting in Lahore.
In April 2006, I have
the honour to organize the annual meeting of the WPA-Transcultural
Psychiatry Section in Vienna, in cooperation with the Society for the
Study of Psychiatry and Culture. The general theme is "Future
directions of cultural psychiatry". I hope to see all of you at
this conference in Vienna.
October 5, 2006
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