JAPANESE PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHOTHERAPY
AVROHM JACOBSON M. C., U. S. A. R.1, and
ALBERT N. BERENBERG M. S. C., U. S. A. R.2
1 Chief, Neuropsychiatric Service, 141st General Hospital, Japan.
2 Chief, Clinical Psychologist, 141st General Hospital, Japan.
An attempt is made to give some of the philosophy and methods that underlie present-day Japanese psychiatry. A brief discussion of psychosis is given. The classification of "shinkeishitsu" with its subgroupings of neurasthenic states, obsessive-phobic states, and paroxysmal neurosis is outlined and discussed. Monita's 4-phase therapy for treating "shinkeishitsu" is presented together with statistics compiled by the Kyushu University Medical School department of neuropsychiatry. Cultural factors such as Buddhistic influences, national traditions, and cultural patterns are elaborated where they relate to the classification and treatment of mental diseases in Japan. Symptoms characteristic of "shinkeishitsu" are listed with their frequency of occurrence as they were observed at the Kyushu Medical School Clinic. An attempt is made to explain these symptoms on the basis of cultural and historical factors. Some of the limitations of the Japanese approach to psychotherapy as exemplified by Monita's treatment of "shinkeishitsu" are discussed.