PerspectivesCulture, bereavement, and psychiatry
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Reconsidering the definition of Major Depression based on Collaborative Psychiatric Epidemiology Surveys
2017, Journal of Affective DisordersCitation Excerpt :According to a longitudinal symptom-network analysis, sadness, a central part of the core symptom of “depressed mood” in the DSM-IV and DSM-5 definitions of MDD, does not appear to play a key role in the emergence of multiple depressive symptoms (Bringmann et al., 2015). Moreover, sadness may not directly imply pathology (Kleinman, 2012; Maj, 2011b; Wakefield and Schmitz, 2013). Further still, terms that reflect “depressed mood” (e.g., sad or blue) appear less specific to depression in comparison to anhedonia (Clark and Watson, 1991; Joiner et al., 2003).
Finding the Good in Grief: What Augustine Knew that Meursault Could Not
2017, Journal of the American Philosophical AssociationOVERDIAGNOSTIK SOM ANTROPOLOGISK FORSK-NINGSFELT
2023, Tidskriftet AntropologiPsychiatry as a Medical Discipline: Epistemological and Theoretical Issues
2023, Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology
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