What is lost when psychosomatics is replaced by somatization?
To critically review scientific publications from the last five years to identify the main themes linked to psychosomatics and somatization with the purpose of analyzing the meaning of tendencies manifested by these themes and their distribution. A systematic review of abstracts linked to the MEDLINE, LILACS and SciELO databases from 2004 to 2008, using MeSH, the structured vocabulary proposed by the National Library of Medicine, to create 38 content categories in order to classify the papers. Principal component statistical analysis was performed to indicate the structuring order of the themes. We found an expressive dominance of the use of the term somatization, particularly in MEDLINE, with an accentuated tendency to substitute psychosomatics and an overall predominance of psychiatry over other specialties or approaches. Many different perspectives on psychosomatic phenomena are progressively becoming less significant with a concentration of research themes in only four large clusters of categories: 1) psychiatry + psychosomatics; 2) psychiatry - psychosomatics; 3) medical specialties + treatment - subjectivity + scales + psychosomatics - psychiatry and 4) psychiatry × medical specialties + subjectivity + psychosomatics + psychiatry × psychosomatics - psychiatry. We demonstrate that the underlying tendency of present-day research is to eradicate the prefix psycho from psychosomatic studies, with the remaining expression somatization becoming more and more indicative of a strictly biological, physiological and positivistic viewpoint.
Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Digital revista |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Sociedade Portuguesa de Psicologia da Saúde
2012
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Online Access: | http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1645-00862012000100012 |
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Summary: | To critically review scientific publications from the last five years to identify the main themes linked to psychosomatics and somatization with the purpose of analyzing the meaning of tendencies manifested by these themes and their distribution. A systematic review of abstracts linked to the MEDLINE, LILACS and SciELO databases from 2004 to 2008, using MeSH, the structured vocabulary proposed by the National Library of Medicine, to create 38 content categories in order to classify the papers. Principal component statistical analysis was performed to indicate the structuring order of the themes. We found an expressive dominance of the use of the term somatization, particularly in MEDLINE, with an accentuated tendency to substitute psychosomatics and an overall predominance of psychiatry over other specialties or approaches. Many different perspectives on psychosomatic phenomena are progressively becoming less significant with a concentration of research themes in only four large clusters of categories: 1) psychiatry + psychosomatics; 2) psychiatry - psychosomatics; 3) medical specialties + treatment - subjectivity + scales + psychosomatics - psychiatry and 4) psychiatry × medical specialties + subjectivity + psychosomatics + psychiatry × psychosomatics - psychiatry. We demonstrate that the underlying tendency of present-day research is to eradicate the prefix psycho from psychosomatic studies, with the remaining expression somatization becoming more and more indicative of a strictly biological, physiological and positivistic viewpoint. |
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