1. Transient diabetes mellitus associated with culture change
- Author
-
Thomas H. Holmes and Kang-E Michael Hong
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Remission, Spontaneous ,Learned helplessness ,Frustration ,Culture change ,Developmental psychology ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Diabetes mellitus ,Anxiety, Separation ,Adaptation, Psychological ,medicine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Humans ,Foreign country ,Social Behavior ,Life Style ,media_common ,Psychological Tests ,Emigration and Immigration ,medicine.disease ,Psychophysiologic Disorders ,Acculturation ,Mother-Child Relations ,Self Concept ,United States ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Feeling ,Social Isolation ,Psychology ,Social Adjustment ,Stress, Psychological - Abstract
This communication presents a case study of transient diabetes mellitus occurring in a setting of migration from a foreign country to the United States. The patient described a dream-like, semishock state in which he experienced overwhelming frustrations, a sense of insecurity, feelings of helplessness, and inability to reason clearly and think logically when he faced sudden cultural changes induced by the migration. The magnitude of life changes produced by migration and subsequent acculturation was measured by the Schedule of Recent Experience. The diabetic symptoms and signs disappeared within three years after onset when the patient regained a sense of security and a sense of competence, and when he had become adapted to the new culture.
- Published
- 1973