Shy Bladder, Social Spaces: A Biocultural Critique of Paruresis and Restroom Design Across Cultures

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Abstract

Paruresis, or "shy bladder syndrome," is classified as a social anxiety disorder in Western psychiatry (American Psychiatric Association 2013). This study challenges its medicalization through a medical anthropology framework, integrating cross-cultural analysis and evolutionary insights on privacy-seeking behaviors. Employing qualitative synthesis, we argue paruresis is a rational human response to environmental stressors, rooted in evolved instincts for privacy during elimination and shaped by culturally specific restroom designs. Comparing Western norms with privacy-focused designs in Japan, Islamic societies, Scandinavia, and Akan communities in Ghana, we critique how Western architectures exacerbate anxiety. Recent evidence highlights health risks from inadequate restroom privacy and benefits of inclusive designs (Taylor et al. 2024; Archova Visuals 2025). Drawing on embodiment (Csordas 1990), biopolitics (Foucault 1995), and habitus (Bourdieu 1977), we propose culturally sensitive restroom reforms, contributing to medical anthropology’s critique of biomedical paradigms and public health policy.

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