Diagnostic Debate: No End in Sight

January 6th, 2011

       

A GoodTherapy.org News Summary

This isn’t the first article on debates about the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM), and it won’t be the last. The DSM is the guidebook that is used by therapists and counselors to diagnose their patients’ mental health status. The guidebook, which is revised every few years, features detailed symptoms and criteria that funnel individuals from broad diagnoses (“bipolar,” “personality disorder”) to specific subsets (“Axis II” or “Cluster B”). There’s much debate over whether these categorizations actually help the patients themselves. On the up side, labeling a problem can provide perspective and offer “the answer” a person was looking for. On the down side, labeling problems often turns into labeling people (pathologizing) and can, as Gary Greenberg writes, “chalk up life’s difficulties to mental illness.”

This latter point has been getting a lot of press lately. One of the most outspoken opponents of new changes to the DSM is Allen Francis, the man who spearheaded the manual’s previous revision and has come to regret where several of those revisions have led. Under his watch, the DSM opened up diagnostic criteria to address varying degrees of severity. For example, Francis noted that some people experienced a mild form of autism, known as Asperger’s syndrome, which interfered with social functioning but not much else. Though studies showed that Asperger’s was “vanishingly rare,” its inclusion in the DSM preceded a tidal wave of Asperger’s diagnoses. Similar trends were echoed in the areas of bipolar disorder and ADHD.

The problem, as Allen Francis and other critics see it, is not that these aren’t real conditions that warrant evaluation and treatment from counselors and psychotherapists. These are, in fact, very real struggles faced by people the world over. The problem is that these problems are over-diagnosed and over-treated. Students who exhibit social awkwardness, if diagnosed with a form of autism, are eligible for specialized services and classroom support. Adults diagnosed with bipolar can get prescriptions for mood stabilizers and antipsychotic drugs, which benefit pharmaceutical companies, many of whom have aggressively marketed their mood-related drugs since the last DSM update.

So the problem remains: is it better to broaden the definitions of mental health disorders, so as to allow treatment for people who aren’t eligible for treatment without a diagnosis? Or is it better to play it safe: to, as Will Meek puts it, “look for horses before zebras” when you see footprints? In other words, to look for real life problems—trouble with family, work, relationships, and stress—before looking for a diagnostic label. The debate continues.

© Copyright 2011 by www.GoodTherapy.org Columbia Bureau - All Rights Reserved.

Print This Post Print This Post

  • Find the Right Therapist

  • Join GoodTherapy.org - Therapist Only
   

Comments

  • pam g January 6th, 2011 at 11:18 AM #1

    Goes to show that medicine needs a lot more one on one care than simply consulting a book for a diagnosis!

  • Henry Simon January 6th, 2011 at 11:42 AM #2

    Using generic terms is not enough and here should be as much specification as possible. Only then can we effectively tackle a disorder, isn’t it?

  • cathy January 6th, 2011 at 11:51 PM #3

    all the naming and other things will not matter much if these is greater awareness regardin the disorders in the people. then it will also clear any prejudices that they may have and whatever may be the disorder, people will have a clear picture of what it is and how it’s going to be cured!

  • faye raye January 7th, 2011 at 5:38 AM #4

    over diagnosis is killing the validity of many ailments in the psychological fields- kind of like the kid who cries wolf, you do it so much that nobody believes it anymore

Leave a Reply

By commenting you acknowledge acceptance of GoodTherapy.org's Terms and Conditions of Use.

 

*

 

* = Required fields

 
 

Search Our Blog:

Content Author Title

   

Blog Categories

 

Find the Right Therapist

Advanced Search | Browse Locations

        therapist Topic Expert  

Recent Comments

  • LR: It’s natural for men to fight over women since there’s more men than women in the world, including North America since we prefer...
  • Tonya Ladipo: Ted, I agree that some people do get threatened because they think that you want to move away from them. But really growth is about...
  • Bill: This hit home. After 12 years she just unexpectedly pulled the plug for no reason except that she just “wants out.” We were...
  • Ted: You would think that a spouse would be supportive of your growth but I find that many people get kind of threatened. They start to think that...
  • juliette r: somewhere along the way Americans have been led to believe that taking a vacation is a bad thing! i can even remember growing up and my...