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Salma M Khaled

Social and Economic Survey Research Institute, Qatar University, Doha, Qatar.

2 papers in the library · 12 citations · publishing 2022-2023

Papers

Cross-cultural Differences in Hallucinations: A Comparison Between Middle Eastern and European Community-Based Samples.

Schizophrenia bulletin February 24, 2023 Salma M Khaled, Sanne G Brederoo, Arij Yehya et al. 8 citations

Hallucinations in nonclinical populations are shaped by culture. Comparing Dutch and Qatari adults (2,999 each) on the Questionnaire for Psychotic Experiences, tactile and olfactory hallucinations occurred at similar lifetime rates in both countries. Auditory and visual hallucinations were twice as common in the Dutch sample, and Dutch participants reported younger ages of onset for auditory and tactile hallucinations. Although Qatari participants reported fewer auditory and visual hallucinations overall, those who experienced them had higher mean scores for past-week hallucinations, more impact on daily functioning, and more frequent commanding voices. The findings suggest hallucinations in the Qatari sample carried greater clinical relevance, with implications for early screening and prevention.

Psychotic-like experiences among university female students in Qatar: A qualitative-phenomenological study.

Frontiers in psychiatry January 1, 2022 Arij Yehya, Salma M Khaled, Iris E C Sommer et al. 4 citations

Psychotic-like experiences (hallucinations or delusions below the threshold of a disorder) are common in the general population. In interviews with 12 female undergraduate students in Qatar, these experiences were prevalent. Students' descriptions showed that culture and religion shaped the types of hallucinations and some delusions they reported. Many students normalized their experiences and linked them to real-life events, possibly as a defense against the stigma of mental illness and being labeled abnormal.