Finding the Right Comparison Group Sometimes, finding the right comparison group can make a
crucial difference in a research study—and in peoples' lives. In the
1980s, psychiatrists in Israel began to see patients who fell into
trance-like states, spoke "in tongues," and made strong, rapid
head movements (Witztum et al., 1996). Many of these patients also behaved
strangely or aggressively, or sat listlessly and refused to eat. At first,
psychiatrists tried to treat these patients with anti-psychotic drugs or
long hospitalizations, with no success. The psychiatrists failed because they compared these
patients' symptoms only with the behavior of other Israeli patients. In
fact, the new disorder's victims were Ethiopian Jews who had recently
immigrated to Israel. The patients saw themselves as suffering from
possession by a Zar, an evil spirit well-known to Ethiopians, which
attacks victims who are suffering psychological stress. When the patients
reduced their stress by gaining support from family members and performing
traditional Ethiopian ceremonies to please the Zar, they recovered. |