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      Explaining medically unexplained symptoms.

      Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. Revue Canadienne de Psychiatrie
      Culture, Female, Humans, Life Change Events, Male, Primary Health Care, Psychological Theory, Somatoform Disorders, ethnology, psychology, Stress, Psychological

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          Abstract

          Patients with medically unexplained symptoms comprise from 15% to 30% of all primary care consultations. Physicians often assume that psychological factors account for these symptoms, but current theories of psychogenic causation, somatization, and somatic amplification cannot fully account for common unexplained symptoms. Psychophysiological and sociophysiological models provide plausible medical explanations for most common somatic symptoms. Psychological explanations are often not communicated effectively, do not address patient concerns, and may lead patients to reject treatment or referral because of potential stigma. Across cultures, many systems of medicine provide sociosomatic explanations linking problems in family and community with bodily distress. Most patients, therefore, have culturally based explanations available for their symptoms. When the bodily nature and cultural meaning of their suffering is validated, most patients will acknowledge that stress, social conditions, and emotions have an effect on their physical condition. This provides an entree to applying the symptom-focused strategies of behavioural medicine to address the psychosocial factors that contribute to chronicity and disability.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          15560312
          10.1177/070674370404901003

          Chemistry
          Culture,Female,Humans,Life Change Events,Male,Primary Health Care,Psychological Theory,Somatoform Disorders,ethnology,psychology,Stress, Psychological

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