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Cultural Placebos From the Wild in Patients With Mental Disorders: The Case of the Nour Association in Fez-Morocco

Objectives: In urgent situations, like those experienced by the Nour Association, individuals often turn to their ethnocultural backgrounds and ingrained coping mechanisms to enhance their psychological and overall well-being. Methods: This study employed a dual-analytical approach. Initially, parti...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Iranian rehabilitation journal 2024-03, Vol.22 (1), p.129-138
Main Authors: Khabbache, Hicham, Ouazizi, Khalid, Ait Ali, Driss, Cherqui, Abdelhalim, Rizzo, Amelia, Tarchi, Livio, Bulut, Sefa, Szarpak, Łukasz, Makkaoui, Mohamed, Ghouat, Hanane El, Jalilzadeh Afshari, Parisa, Namazi Yousefi, Rezvaneh, Chirico, Francesco
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Objectives: In urgent situations, like those experienced by the Nour Association, individuals often turn to their ethnocultural backgrounds and ingrained coping mechanisms to enhance their psychological and overall well-being. Methods: This study employed a dual-analytical approach. Initially, participant observation was used to understand the day-to-day activities within the Nour Center’s authentic environment. Subsequently, three cognitive theories—conceptual metaphor, schema, and frame theory were applied to analyze and interpret the transformation in the patients’ conceptual systems comprehensively.  Results: We detected that the patient community at the Nour Center utilized various socio-cultural practices (drama roleplay, peer-support therapy, and task-shifting) to create an improvised, theory-independent recovery program focused on ‘awakening’ and ‘self-empowerment’. These latter were mediated by higher-order meta-cognitive processes, such as ‘self-regulation’ and ‘self-description’, frames, such as ‘the home frame’ and ‘the hospital frame’, and schemata, such as ‘the function schema’, which are foundational to ‘cultural placebos’. Discussion: The present findings established that both general health and mental health are significantly shaped by societal influences, indicating that cultural therapy emerges from the intricate dynamics of sub-cultural social systems. Ultimately, concepts of illness and recovery are subject to cultural negotiation.
ISSN:1735-3602
1735-3610
DOI:10.32598/irj.22.1.2288.2