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Hikikomori and Intercultural Manifestations: a Bibliografic Review

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 April 2020

F. Ranieri
Affiliation:
USL8 Arezzo, UFSMIA, Arezzo, Italy
M. Andreoli
Affiliation:
USL8 Arezzo, UFSMIA, Arezzo, Italy
E. Bellagamba
Affiliation:
USL8 Arezzo, UFSMIA, Arezzo, Italy
E. Franchi
Affiliation:
USL8 Arezzo, UFSMIA, Arezzo, Italy
F. Mancini
Affiliation:
USL8 Arezzo, UFSMIA, Arezzo, Italy
L. Pitti
Affiliation:
USL8 Arezzo, UFSMIA, Arezzo, Italy
S. Sfameni
Affiliation:
USL8 Arezzo, UFSMIA, Arezzo, Italy
M. Stoppielli
Affiliation:
USL8 Arezzo, UFSMIA, Arezzo, Italy

Abstract

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Introduction

"Hikikomori” is known since the 80s and was described by Saito in 1998 as a different clinical picture from any current diagnostic category, being social withdrawal the most important aspect. Young hikikomoris, more than a million in Japan (Teo2010), withdraw in their room for at least six months, interrupting communication with the outside world. This picture was described by many international scholars (Watts 2002; Zielenzinger 2008; Teo 2010; Piotti et al.2014). Part of international literature, after DSMIV-TR, defined hikikomori as a culture-bound syndrome (Agugliaetal.,2010). However, recently similar cases were described in different contexts, both in Asia and Western world (Kato et al.,2012), highlighting peculiar clinical signs influenced by the context, although maintaining a common matrix referred to Saito framework.

Aims

This literature review aims to gather descriptions of hikikomori in different cultures, to identify cross-cultural variables on which the phenomenon is based and to analyse any differences in clinical manifestations.

Methods

Eighty-two articles which contained ‘hikikomori” in the title or abstract were reviewed and searched using online databases (PsycINFO, PubMed, googleschoolar)

Results

The scientific literature was divided by year of publication and by three phases:

1. The articles are mostly Japanese

2. Western articles, referring to Japanese contexts

3. The Hikikomoriconcept isclosely related tosocial withdrawal (sources from many countries).

Conclusion

The literature shows a tendency to consider hikikomori a phenomenon which exceeds cultural context (although influenced by it), rather than a culturally characterized syndrome.

Type
Article: 0573
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2015
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