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MITCHELL
WEISS, M.D., Ph.D.
TP Section Committee member, 2005-2008
Switzerland
My path into medicine
and cultural psychiatry may perhaps be described best as unlikely. I was
an undergraduate at the University of Pennsylvania, during an era when
‘a liberal arts education’ was still regarded as a good idea, and as
I reached my senior year, a
well-marked career path seemed out of reach. Pushed by my family toward
a career in medicine, I knew that I wanted something different from
working as the kind of doctor I knew from my middle-class upbringing. It
seemed more technical than scientific, and more a path of least
resistance than a real career choice.
Dropping out of
organic chemistry would, I thought, put an end to any further
consideration of medical school. During my undergraduate years from 1965
to 1969, I studied physics and planned to become a scientist. I also
became very interested in music, particularly jazz, folk music, and
Indian music, and I worked in radio at the University station,
which served the Philadelphia area. There I organized the jazz
programming, which became popular, and worked as a disk jockey; playing
records and interviewing musicians who came to perform in the city.
Motivated by the mix
of styles and cultures of these music interests, the city, and the
university, I had become acquainted with the South Asia Studies Center
at University of Pennsylvania, which was the first of its kind in the
country. I took as many courses as I could in the culture and history of
India and the region. I also studied Indian music and the sitar and
established a radio programme of Indian music. When I completed my
undergraduate training, I had second thoughts about graduate school in
physics and decided against it. I continued working in radio, first in
Philadelphia and then in New York, before returning to the University of
Pennsylvania as a graduate student in South Asia Studies.
Penn was an exciting
place to study South Asia. The program brought together a mix of
specialists in fields of philology, anthropology, literature, art,
music, politics, economics and more. After taking basic courses in
modern and classical languages (Hindi and Sanskrit), and with initial
exposure to classical traditions of Indian medicine through a visiting
professor at Penn, A. L. Basham, my interests and thesis topic shifted
to questions of health, psychology, and psychiatry. I chose a
dissertation topic that brought together my previously suppressed
interests in medicine, along with science and culture, in a study of
concepts of serious mental disorder (unmda), as formulated in the
traditional medical system of India, Ayurveda.
In addition to the
philological and cultural aspects of my thesis work, which were
supervised by Ludo Rocher and involved translating relevant chapters of
the texts, I was also guided by Edward Foulks, a psychiatrist and
anthropologist, who was actively contributing to the emerging field of
cultural psychiatry. Combining the interests of academics and the
relevance of clinical practice, Foulks’ work made it clear that
medical studies could be far more interesting and fulfilling than I had
previously imagined. His enthusiasm for the topic suggested fascinating
possibilities that I wanted to pursue. Perhaps, I thought, if it was
possible for me to follow his example, this would focus my liberal arts
experience on a career path that I wanted to follow. I then took the
required premedical courses while completing my PhD at Penn, so that I
could go to medical school, train in psychiatry, and develop a career
that integrated my interests in South Asian culture, medicine, and
psychiatry.
After medical
training and field experience in India, where I established contacts
with clinicians and scholars working in the traditional medical system
of Ayurveda, and with colleagues in psychiatry departments of medical
centers, I started residency training in psychiatry at the Cambridge
Hospital (Harvard University) in 1981. Arthur Kleinman, already a leader
in the field at that time, was just returning to Harvard, and I was
fortunate to be able to study with him as a teacher and mentor, who
encouraged me and helped me further shape and advance my career plans.
With a focus on cultural psychiatry Kleinman brought to the Cambridge
program, the medical anthropology training program that he was
developing in the University, and links to the School of Public Health,
this was a very stimulating place to be for anyone interested in
cultural psychiatry.
An NIMH career
development award in 1987 enabled me to study medical anthropology and
public health, and to arrange extended periods of field research in
India. During that time, I developed collaborative research links that
have continued over several decades. My clinical base remained at the
Cambridge Hospital, and I also worked on an inpatient ward at the
Metropolitan State Hospital. My academic base was the Department of
Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School, where the guidance of Leon
Eisenberg was an important influence. I benefited from the medical
anthropology program in that department, that Byron and Mary Jo Good had
developed with Arthur Kleinman.
My extended periods
in India, arranged during and after my psychiatry residency, were
especially important in shaping current interests in cultural
epidemiology as an approach to cultural research in psychiatry and other
health studies. My collaborations there were in diverse hospital and
community settings throughout the country, in and near Mumbai,
Bangalore, Varanasi, Ranchi, Kolkata, and Pune. Experience with many
colleagues from these sites helped both to apply and rethink Arthur
Kleinman’s formulation of the ‘explanatory model’, which had been
an important influence on clinical and research models when I was
training.
In 1992, I joined the
Culture, Community, and Health Studies Program, headed by Morley Beiser,
at the University of Toronto. I had met him while serving
on the advisory group to the DSM-IV Task Force for culture and
diagnosis, which produced the cultural formulation. In addition to my
work with the diverse community of Toronto, my international research
began to extend to interests beyond clinical psychiatry. These included
cultural features and the emotional impact of selected tropical
diseases, with new collaborations in several African countries and new
activities in India. These collaborations through the WHO Special
Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases also brought me
into contact with colleagues involved more exclusively in questions of
international health. In much of this work, stigma and gender remain
cross-cutting topics of interest.
It is from research
in cultural psychiatry that the concepts and methods of cultural
epidemiology have emerged, and cultural psychiatry remains a major
interest. Interdisciplinary linkages between psychiatry and tropical
infectious diseases, and between clinical and population-based interests
have developed from that, as the focus of my current research and
teaching.
Since joining the
Swiss Tropical Institute in Basel, in 1995, where I head the Department
of Public Health and Epidemiology, my research in cultural psychiatry
continues to examine questions of clinical and community mental health
through collaborations in India. These include a rural mental health
program in the Sundarban region of West Bengal, working with Prof A. N.
Chowdhury, and an urban community mental health programme in Mumbai,
working with Prof S. R. Parkar.
The social and
cultural contexts of suicidal behavior are important themes in these
Indian studies, complemented by comparable studies in Europe, including
an ongoing study of the cultural epidemiology of suicidal behavior in
Basel. This work is concerned with suicide prevention and with
identifying local patterns of distress that define priorities for mental
health from local community perspectives, which complement professional
concepts of DSM and ICD disorders. The concepts and methods of cultural
epidemiology that we have developed to advance these studies, and
training materials that my research group and collaborators are also
developing, aim to advance research and research capacity in cultural
psychiatry. This work also indicates how experience with cultural
psychiatry contributes to cultural studies of other aspects of clinical
and public health research.
April 5, 2006
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