Thursday, January 14, 2016

Final Project: The effect of culture on Schizophrenia
By: Janet Rodriguez

            Schizophrenia is a serious mental disorder that affects about 1% of the world population. Schizophrenia alters the way people think, feel and act. Individuals often have difficulty distinguishing between was is real and what is not real. They are also often unresponsive and may have difficulty expressing normal emotions in social situations. The symptoms of Schizophrenia appear most often in young people between the ages of 13-25. For young males, schizophrenia can be detected earlier than females. Warning sign often include hearing and seeing things that aren’t there, a constant feeling of being watched, a change is personality or hygiene appearance, inability to sleep or concentrate, increasing withdraw from social situations and inappropriate or bizarre behavior. The cause of this particular disease is still unclear. Some suspected causes of this disease include: genetics, biology, and/or viral infections and immune disorders. Schizophrenia is not caused by poor parenting, childhood experiences, or lack of will power like many people think it is. People with Schizophrenia are not violent and dangerous to others as many people think they are. The signs of this disease are different for everyone and may develop slowly over months or years, or they may appear all at once. Recent studies have found out that Schizophrenia affects people differently based on their cultural background.
            A group of scientist at the World Health Organization studied the differences between people with schizophrenia in developed and developing countries, trying to find out if culture played a role in the development of the disease. The final results showed that the symptoms and prognosis of the disease differed from country to country. In more industrialized nations the disease is generally more severe than in developing countries. This is believed to be true because in developing countries, illnesses are believed to be caused by a type of supernatural force, therefore there is no reflection on the diseased person.
            Schizophrenic patients have tend to have delusions that reflect the themes and values of that certain individual’s culture. For example, a person with Schizophrenia from Ireland would have delusions of sainthood, because religious piety is valued. The delusions for patients in America tend to focus more on sinister uses of technology and surveillance. Some patients might report that they are being spied on by their televisions or that they are being x-rayed as they walk down the street. In Nigeria mental illnesses are believed to be cause by evil spirits, therefore the delusions may take the
form of witches or ancestral ghosts. In Japan, patient’s delusions revolve around slander or the fear of being publicly humiliated because the Japanese prize honor and social conformity. Many behaviors that would be seen as schizophrenic symptoms to the Western world, are considered are seen as spiritual delight in developing countries. If a person claimed he was a god on earth, he would be called delusional in western society but if he did that in India, he would be considered a spirit medium who is the human incarnation of a Hindu god. See the difference? Along the same lines, in African cultures, hallucinations are not always a sign of a mental disease. Shamans, who are tribal priest, act as intermediaries between the natural and the spiritual worlds. They are deeply respected for their abilities. These beliefs are cultural norms for some people and are not considered to be delusions.
A Shaman
















Check out the video below for more information:






Sources Cited (MLA Format)
"Cross-Cultural Variance of Schizophrenia in Symptoms, Diagnosis and Treatment." GU Journal of Health Sciences. N.p., n.d. Web. 13 Jan. 2016.
"Hallucinatory 'voices' Shaped by Local Culture, Stanford Anthropologist Says." Stanford University. N.p., n.d. Web. 13 Jan. 2016.
PBS. PBS, n.d. Web. 13 Jan. 2016.

"Schizophrenia." Mental Health America. N.p., n.d. Web. 13 Jan. 2016.

Monday, January 11, 2016

Mexico City Earthquake in 1985
By: Janet Rodriguez
Hotel Regis (before)
On September 19th, 1985 at around 7:19 a.m., Mexico City had a powerful earthquake that caused a
Hotel Regis (after)
significant amount of damage with a magnitude of 8.1. This was one of the strongest earthquakes to ever hit the area. The Earthquake was centered off the pacific coast of Michoacán, Mexico. Michoacán Is more than 200 miles away from the city of Mexico and most of the damage was done in Mexico City. Mexico City is known for being built on top of a lake bed by the Aztecs. Therefore you can imagine how much damage an earthquake could cause to the city due to its soft sediments that amplify seismic waves. After an earthquake in 1957, the government issued the first of the building codes with respect to earthquake resistance. However these regulations did not have in mind the power of the 1985 earthquake.





Apartment complexes (before)
The quake was said to be felt all the way in Huston, Texas and Guatemala City, Guatemala. That was over an area of 319,000 square miles. The earthquake killed more than 10,000 people and caused 30,000 of them to get injured. About 25,000 people were left homeless due to the demolition of apartment building and houses. Thousands of buildings were damaged and more than 400 buildings in the city collapsed. To make things worse, on the evening of the next day an aftershock shook the region with a magnitude of 7.5.

Apartment complexes (after)
After all seeing all the damage, everyone in the city started to help getting people who were stuck, feeding people who were hungry and they formed their own rescue teams. They decided to do it all on their own because of the slow response of the Mexican government. The president at the time was Miguel de la Madrid. He was viciously criticized for the Mexican government’s slow and weak response to the natural disaster that occurred. The president had rejected international aid offers and said that there wasn’t a lot of damaged caused by the earthquake, which clearly was a lie. The disaster also helped expose that due to government corruption, the enforcement of building codes were not being applied. The total cost for the recovery
of the city was between 3-4 million dollars. After this disaster in Mexico City the Civil Protection Committee was created. The committee organized drills with rescue workers, police officers, hospital staff and metro personnel. An early-alert earthquake warning system has also been established in Mexico City, as well as other safety measures, as a result of the devastating earthquake of 1985.




Here's a video with more information:



Sources: