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The Evolution of DSM. Janet B.W. Williams, PhD Professor Emerita of Clinical Psychiatric Social Work, Dept. Of Psychiatry, Columbia University Senior VP of Global Science, MedAvante , Inc. 12/7/13. Why the DSM (1952)?. Pre-1952 : several different national systems in
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The Evolution of DSM Janet B.W. Williams, PhD Professor Emerita of Clinical Psychiatric Social Work, Dept. Of Psychiatry, Columbia University Senior VP of Global Science, MedAvante, Inc. 12/7/13
Why the DSM (1952)? • Pre-1952: several different national systems in • use, multiple state systems • Dissatisfaction with existing classifications • APA develops its own • First glossary definitions of disorders • Of little or no interest to clinicians, researchers
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders and International Classification of Diseases
DSM-I Classification • Acute/chronic brain disorders • Mental deficiency • Psychotic disorders • Psychophysiologic disorders • Psychoneurotic disorders • Personality disorders • Transient situational personality disorders
Significance of DSM-I (1952) • First glossary of definitions of categories • APA in control of classification • Influence of Adolph Meyer “Schizophrenic reaction” “Manic depressive reaction” “Anxiety reaction” • Psychoanalytic concepts in neuroses and psychophysiologic disorders • “...utilization of various defense mechanisms...”
DSM-I Description of Manic Depressive Reaction, Manic Type (1952) “This group is characterized by elation or irritability, with overtalkativeness, flight of ideas, and increased motor activity. Transitory, often momentary, episodes of depression may occur, but will not change the classification from the manic type of reaction.” (p. 25)
DSM-II Classification • Mental retardation • Organic brain syndromes • Psychoses • Neuroses • Personality disorders and certain other non-psychotic mental disorders • Psychophysiologic disorders • Special symptoms • Transient situational disturbances
Significance of DSM-II (1968) • APA decides to use ICD-8 (slightly modified) • British hegemony in ICD • Eliminating “Reaction” • Multiple diagnoses encouraged
DSM-II Description of Manic-depressive Illness, Manic Type (1968) “This disorder consists exclusively of manic episodes. These episodes are characterized by excessive elation, irritability, talkativeness, flight of ideas, and accelerated speech and motor activity. Brief periods of depression sometimes occur, but they are never true depressive episodes.” (p. 36)
Janet B.W. Williams, DSW (now PhD) Text EditorDSM-III Coordinator of DSM-III Field Trials DSM-III-R Task Force
What Principles Guided DSM-III? • Inclusiveness • Descriptive approach: usable across theoretical • orientations • Diagnostic (“operational”) criteria • Expanded descriptions • Multiaxial system • ICD compatibility a formality
Goals of DSM • communication: precision in language, “short-hand” • clinical: facilitate identification, treatment, and prevention of mental disorders • research: further understanding of etiology • education: teach psychopathology • data collection: statistical registry
Types of Information in the Text • Essential features • Associated features • Age at onset • Course • Impairment • Complications • Predisposing factors • Prevalence • Sex ratio • Familial pattern • Differential diagnosis
DSM-III Controversies • Task Force unrepresentative • Definition of mental disorder • Dysthymia (Neurotic depression) vs Neurotic depression (Dysthymia)
January 3, 2005 THE DICTIONARY OF DISORDER by ALIX SPIEGEL www.newyorker.com
Multiaxial System – Eliminated in DSM-5 • Axis I: Clinical Conditions • Axis II: Personality Disorders and Mental Retardation • Axis III: general medical conditions • Axis IV: psychosocial stressors and environmental problems • Axis V: Global Assessment of Functioning Scale
Person-in-Environment System Four factors: • Social roles in relationship to others • Mental health • Social environment • Physical health
Additional Materials DSM CasebooksDSM-IV SourcebooksStructured Clinical Interview for DSM (SCID) - SCID-I (for Axis I) - SCID-RV (Research Version) - SCID-CV (Clinician Version)- SCID-II (for Axis II)- SCID-CT (for Clinical Trials)
1987: DSM-III-R • originally intended to be just a “fine tuning” • corrected inconsistencies and incorporated latest research • disadvantage: change too disruptive
1994: DSM-IV • revision process based on empirical review • elimination of the term “organic” • expansion of appendix categories • new and deleted categories
DSM-IV Process • Decentralization of revision process • Literature reviews and data reanalysis • Field trials • ICD-10 compatibility • Avoid public controversy • “User-friendly” • High threshold for new diagnoses
2000 - DSM-IV Text Revision • fills 12+ year gap between DSM-IV and DSM-V • based on comprehensive lit review from 1992 to 1999 • no changes to criteria sets allowed • most changes to Associated Features and Disorders, Age, Culture and Gender Features, Prevalence, Course, and Familial Pattern
Michael B. First, MD • Professor of Clinical Psychiatry • Research Psychiatrist, NYSPI • schematherapy and psychopharmacology practice in Manhattan • Forensic expert • Editor of Text and Criteria for DSM-IV and DSM-IV-TR • Editorial and Coding Consultant for DSM-5 • Chief technical and editorial consultant on ICD-11