- Joined
- Jun 11, 2012
- Messages
- 237
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog...llnesses-may-soon-be-labeled-mental-disorders
This article, published in December 2012, discusses the new DSM 5 (The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) criteria they are adding as of May 2013. Added is a new diagnosis, "Somatic Symptom Disorder" or SSD, which is explained below.
The same author updated her article January 17, 2013 here:
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog...al-illness-may-now-be-labeled-mental-disorder
Another interesting article written by Allen Frances, who worked on the DSM IV taskforce, and has tried to keep this diagnosis from being included in the DSM 5, if you'd like to read:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/allen-frances/terrible-news-dsm-5-refus_b_2473321.html
There is a website dedicated to the new DSM 5:
http://www.dsm5.org, but of course, I found little information on anything specific. I'm still researching, so if you have anything to add, please do.
A petition on whitehouse.gov you may sign, in an effort to stop this "diagnosis" from being added to the new DSM:
https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/pe...ased-revised-criteria-dsm-5-may-2013/vDSKX9XT
This article, published in December 2012, discusses the new DSM 5 (The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) criteria they are adding as of May 2013. Added is a new diagnosis, "Somatic Symptom Disorder" or SSD, which is explained below.
Here is the new DSM’s definition of Somatic Symptom Disorder. (Warning: you may have trouble believing what you’re about to read.)
People can be diagnosed with SSD if, for at least six months, they’ve had one or more symptoms that are distressing and/or disruptive to their daily life, and if they have one of the following three reactions:
Criteria #1: disproportionate thoughts about the seriousness of their symptom(s);
Criteria #2: a high level of anxiety about their symptoms or health; or
Criteria #3: devoting excessive time and energy to their symptoms or health concerns...
What’s the problem with all of this? I recognize that there could be a plus side to being diagnosed based on the DSM. Some health insurance companies won’t cover mental health treatments (from therapy to psychotropic drugs) unless the patient has a diagnosis from the DSM. So if you wished to seek therapy or try these medications to help you adjust to the drastic life changes brought about by chronic pain or illness, it’s possible that this expanded definition of somatic disorders will allow you to get these services paid for by your insurance company.
But the downsides of including Somatic Symptom Disorder in the DSM-5 far outweigh the benefits:
1) Those of us with little-understood illnesses who are “excessively” proactive in trying to get answers could have a psychiatric diagnosis added to our medical charts. Then every specialist we’re referred to would see it. The stigma of mental illness is, unfortunately, alive and well in the twenty-first century. In addition, for many of us, it would become a double stigma because we already have a diagnosis that is disregarded by many health care practitioners—CFS, Fibromyalgia, IBS, to name but three.
2) Once a person is diagnosed with a mental disorder, it increases the likelihood that his or her doctor won’t look further for a physical basis for that person’s symptoms. (And it’s possible that health insurance won’t cover those tests anymore since the person has been labeled as having a mental disorder.) This could even affect the motivation to continue to fund and perform research into little-understood illnesses such as CFS and IBS.
And what about illnesses that can take years to diagnose, such as Lyme Disease, Fibromyalgia, Multiple Sclerosis, Systemic Lupus and other autoimmune diseases? If a patient is given a Somatic Symptom Disorder diagnosis early on after reporting symptoms, it’s highly possible that further testing and investigation into physical causes will be put on hold and a person would never get the proper diagnosis and treatment.
The same author updated her article January 17, 2013 here:
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog...al-illness-may-now-be-labeled-mental-disorder
Another interesting article written by Allen Frances, who worked on the DSM IV taskforce, and has tried to keep this diagnosis from being included in the DSM 5, if you'd like to read:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/allen-frances/terrible-news-dsm-5-refus_b_2473321.html
There is a website dedicated to the new DSM 5:
http://www.dsm5.org, but of course, I found little information on anything specific. I'm still researching, so if you have anything to add, please do.
A petition on whitehouse.gov you may sign, in an effort to stop this "diagnosis" from being added to the new DSM:
https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/pe...ased-revised-criteria-dsm-5-may-2013/vDSKX9XT