References
- Arnold, R., Avants, S.K., Margolin, A., & Marcotte, D. (2002). Patient attitudes concerning the inclusion of spirituality into addiction treatment. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 23, 319–326.
- Azhar, M.Z., Varma, S.L., & Dharap, A.S. (1994). Religious psychotherapy in anxiety disorder patients. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 90, 1–3.
- Bodhi, B. (2011). The Noble Eightfold Path: Way to the End of Suffering. Onalaska, WA: Pariyatti Press.
- Bojuwoye, O., & Sodi, T. (2010). Challenges and opportunities to integrating traditional healing into counselling and psychotherapy. Counselling Psychology Quarterly, 23, 283–296.
- Castillo, R.J. (2003). Trance, functional psychosis, and culture. Psychiatry: Interpersonal and Biological Processes, 66, 9–21.
- Collins, C.D. Green, A.T. & Hunter, D.J. (2000). NHS reforms in the United Kingdom and learning from developing country experience. Journal of Management in Medicine, 14, 87–99.
- Dein, S., & Sembhi, S. (2001). The use of traditional healing in south Asian psychiatric patients in the UK: Interactions between professional and folk psychiatries. Transcultural Psychiatry, 38, 243–257.
- Germer, C.K., Siegel, R.D., & Fulton, P.R. (Eds). (2013). Mindfulness and Psychotherapy. New York: Guilford Press.
- Gethin, R. (2011). On some definitions of mindfulness. Contemporary Buddhism, 12, 263–279.
- Grossman, P., & Van Dam, N.T. (2011). Mindfulness, by any other name…: Trials and tribulations of sati in western psychology and science. Contemporary Buddhism, 12, 219–239.
- Halliburton, M. (2004). Finding a fit: Psychiatric pluralism in south India and its implications for WHO studies of mental disorder. Transcultural Psychiatry, 41, 80–98.
- Hopper, K., & Wanderling, J. (2000). Revisiting the developed versus developing country distinction in course and outcome in schizophrenia: Results from ISoS, the WHO collaborative follow up project. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 26, 835–846.
- Hopper, K., Harrison, G., Janca, A., & Sartorius, N. (Eds.). (2007). Recovery from Schizophrenia: An International Perspective: A Report from the WHO Collaborative Project, the International Study of Schizophrenia. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
- Jablensky A., Sartorius N., & Ernberg, G., Anker, M., Korten, A., Cooper, J.E., …Bertelsen, A. (1992). Schizophrenia: Manifestations, incidence and course in different cultures. A World Health Organization ten-country study. Psychological Medicine, Monographs Supplement, 20, 1–97.
- Kabat-Zinn, J. (1994). Wherever You Go, There You Are: Mindfulness Meditation in Everyday Life. New York: Hyperion.
- Kleinman, A. & Good, B. (1985). Culture and Depression. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- McKenzie, K., Patel, V., & Araya, R. (2004). Learning from low-income countries: Mental health. British Medical Journal, 329, 1138–1140.
- Moodley, R., & West, W (Eds.). (2005). Integrating traditional healing practices into counseling and psychotherapy. 22, Sage.
- Moodley, R., & Sutherland, P.. (2010). Psychic retreats in other places: Clients who seek healing with traditional healers and psychotherapists1. Counselling Psychology Quarterly, 23, 267–282.
- Ngoma, M.C., Prince, M., & Mann, A. (2003). Common mental disorders among those attending primary health clinics and traditional healers in urban Tanzania. British Journal of Psychiatry, 183, 349–355.
- Nissen, N., & Manderson, L. (2012). Researching alternative and complementary therapies: Mapping the field. Medical Anthropology: Cross-Cultural Studies in Health and Illness, 32, 1–7.
- Patel, V., & Prince, M. (2010). GMH – A new global health field comes of age. Journal of the American Medical Association, 303, 1976–1977.
- Paziuc, A. (2004). Rethinking Mental Health and Community Centre for Development, Integration and Surveillance in Mental Health. Washington, DC: George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services. Retrieved from http://www.scribd.com/doc/19152525/Rethinking-Mental-Health
- Phillips, D.R., & Verhasselt, Y. (1994). Health and development: Retrospect and prospect. In D.R. Phillips & Y. Verhasselt (Eds) Health and Development (pp. 301–318). London: Routledge.
- Raguram, R., Venkateswaran, A., Ramakrishna, J., & Weiss, M.G. (2002). Traditional community resources for mental health: A report of temple healing from India. British Medical Journal, 325, 38.
- Razali, S.M., Hasanah, C.I., Aminah, K., Subramaniam, M. (1998). Religious–dsociocultural psychotherapy in patients with anxiety and depression. Australian New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 32, 867–872.
- Read, J., Bentall, R.P., & Fosse, R. (2009). Time to abandon the bio-bio-bio model of psychosis: Exploring the epigenetic and psychological mechanisms by which adverse life events lead to psychotic symptoms. Epidemiologia e Psichiatria Sociale, 18, 299–310.
- Rose, E.M., Westefeld, J.S. & Ansley, T.N. (2001). Spiritual issues in counseling: Clients’ beliefs and preferences. Journal of Counselling Psychology, 48, 61–71.
- Ross, E. (2010). Inaugural lecture: African spirituality, ethics and traditional healing –Implications for indigenous South African social work education and practice. South African Journal of Bioethics and Law, 3, 44–51.
- Sashidharan, S.P. (2001). Institutional racism in British psychiatry. Psychiatric Bulletin, 25, 244–247.
- Summerfield, D. (2013). ‘Global mental health’ is an oxymoron and medical imperialism. British Medical Journal, 346, f3509.
- Syed, S.B., Dadwal, V., Rutter, P., Storr, J., Hightower, J., Gooden, R., … Pittet, D. (2012). Developed–developing country partnerships: Benefits to developed countries? Globalization and Health, 8, 17. Retrieved from http://www.globalizationandhealth.com/content/8/1/17
- Timimi, S. (2010). The McDonaldization of childhood: Children’s mental health in neo-liberal market cultures. Transcultural Psychiatry, 47, 686–706.
- Vontress, C.E. (2005). Animism: Foundation of traditional healing in sub-Saharan Africa. In R. Moodley & W. West (Eds), Integrating traditional healing practices into counselling and psychotherapy (pp. 124–137), London, England: Sage.
- Wahlberg, A. (2007). A quackery with a difference – The new medical pluralism and the problem of ‘dangerous practitioners’ in the United Kingdom. Social Science and Medicine, 65, 2307–2316.
- White, R.G., & Sashidharan, S.P. (2014). Towards a more nuanced global mental health. British Journal of Psychiatry, 204, 415–417.
- World Health Organization (1978). The promotion and development of traditional medicine: report of a WHO meeting [held in Geneva from 28 November to 2 December 1977].
- WHO (World Health Organization) (1979). Schizophrenia: An International Follow-Up Study. Chichester: Wiley.
- WHO (2001). Legal Status of Traditional Medicines and Complementary/Alternative Medicine: A Worldwide Review. World Health Organization. Retrieved from http://whqlibdoc.who.int/hq/2001/WHO_EDM_TRM_2001.2.pdf
- WHO (2008). mhGAP: Action Programme. Geneva: World Health Organization.
- WHO (2010). mhGAP: Intervention Guide. Geneva: World Health Organization.
- Williams, C.C. (2003). Re-reading the IPSS research record. Social Science and Medicine, 56, 501–515.