Poverty, Somatisation Tendency and Potency in Low-Income Adolescent Groups of India and Israel: Explorations from the Field

Author:

Banerjee Saoni1ORCID,Lev-Wiesel Rachel1234ORCID,De Sonali5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Emili Sagol Research Center for CAT (Creative Arts Therapies), University of Haifa, Haifa 3498838, Israel

2. Body & Mind Psychotherapy Track, Social Work, Tel Hai Academic Center, Qiryat Shemona 1220800, Israel

3. National Center for Children at Risk Assessment, The Sagol Center for Hyperbaric Treatment and Research, Shamir Hospital, Be’er Ya’akov 60930, Israel

4. FAA-Emili Sagol Creative Arts Research and Innovation for Well-Being Center at Chulalongkorn University (CARIW), Bangkok 10330, Thailand

5. Department of Psychology, Calcutta University, Kolkata 700009, India

Abstract

Poverty increases vulnerability towards somatisation and influences the sense of mastery and well-being. The present study on adolescents living in relative poverty in a high-income group country (Israel) and a low-middle-income group country (India) explored the nature of somatisation tendency (ST) and its relationship with potency and perception of poverty (PP). Potency, a buffer against stress-induced negative health effects, was hypothesized to be negatively related to ST and mediate the link between PP and ST. Purposive sampling was used to collect questionnaire-based data from community youth (12–16 years) of two metropolitan cities—Kolkata (India, N = 200) and Tel-Aviv (Israel, N = 208). The nature of ST, PP and potency was analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics and correlation-regression statistics and mediation analysis were used to understand the relationship among them. A clinically significant level of ST was reported by both Indian and Israeli youth experiencing 5–7 somatic symptoms on average. Potency was found to be a significant predictor of ST in both countries (p < 0.05) and emerged as a significant mediator (p < 0.001) in the PP and ST relationship among Indian adolescents. The present study highlights potency as a protective buffer in economically vulnerable community adolescents and re-establishes a high prevalence of ST among them, irrespective of their country’s global economic position.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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