Representations of Mental Illness in a Ga Community in Southern Ghana
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Journal of Black Psychology
Abstract
This study explored lay concepts about and attributions of mental illness in a
Ga community in southern Ghana. The study’s sample consisted of 11 Ga men
and 12 Ga women, ranging in age from 30-81. Participants completed one-on one interviews. Participants ascribed to polyphasic attributions of mental
illness including biomedical and spiritual explanations. Attributions informed
understandings of help-seeking behavior. Stigma was recognized as an im portant factor in the lived experience of people with mental illness. The
recognition of individual distress as a marker of mental illness seemed less
prominent than social indicators. Our interviewees’ narratives highlighted the
importance of the social context in identifying and making meaning of mental
illness in the community of study
Description
Research Article