TY - JOUR PY - 2010// TI - Khyal Attacks: A Key Idiom of Distress Among Traumatized Cambodia Refugees JO - Culture, medicine, and psychiatry A1 - Hinton, Devon E. A1 - Pich, Vuth A1 - Marques, Luana A1 - Nickerson, Angela A1 - Pollack, Mark H. SP - 244 EP - 278 VL - 34 IS - 2 N2 -
Traumatized Cambodian refugees with PTSD often complain of khyal attacks. The current study investigates khyâl attacks from multiple perspectives and examines the validity of a model of how khyâl attacks are generated. The study found that khyal attacks had commonly been experienced in the previous 4 weeks and that their severity was strongly correlated with the severity of PTSD (PTSD Checklist). It was found that khyâl attacks were triggered by various processes-such as worry, trauma recall, standing up, going to a mall-and that khyâl attacks almost always met panic attack criteria. It was also found that during a khyal attack there was great fear that death might occur from bodily dysfunction. It was likewise found that a complex nosology of khyal attacks exists that rates the attacks on a scale of severity, that the severity determines how the khyâl attacks should be treated and that those treatments are often complex. As illustrated by the article, khyal attacks constitute a key aspect of trauma ontology in this group, a culturally specific experiencing of anxiety and trauma-related disorder. The article also contributes to the study of trauma somatics, that is, to the study of how trauma results in specific symptoms in a specific cultural context, showing that a key part of the trauma-somatic reticulum is often a cultural syndrome.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0165-005X UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11013-010-9174-y ID - ref1 ER -