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Course orientation: Introduction to diagnosis in counseling. Class overview. Introductions Syllabus & course expectations Getting started… Welcome to the DSM Role of diagnosis in counseling Risks & benefits of diagnosis. Diagnosis in counseling. DEFINE ASSESSMENT (AX) DIAGNOSIS (DX)
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Class overview • Introductions • Syllabus & course expectations • Getting started… • Welcome to the DSM • Role of diagnosis in counseling • Risks & benefits of diagnosis
Diagnosis in counseling DEFINE ASSESSMENT (AX) DIAGNOSIS (DX) TREATMENT (TX)
Diagnosis in counseling • Should counselors diagnose? • Is diagnosis consistent with “normal and developmental” focus? • Is it possible to not diagnose?
Role of dx in counseling • Referral • Symptom identification • Diagnosis • Treatment planning • Treatment • Follow-up In a nutshell: AX DX TX
History of the DSM • 1840 – US Census adds “Idiocy/insanity” • 1880 – US Census includes 7 categories • Mania • Melancholia • Monomania • Paresis • Dementia • Dipsomania • Epilepsy
History of Diagnosis • 1917 – Census bureau & mental health agencies collect info across hospitals • WWI – Army & VA needs better system • 10 psychoses • 9 psychoneuroses • 7 character/behavior/intelligence disorders • WWII – Growing confusion
History of DSM-I • Published 1952 w/ WHO’s ICD-6 • 108 types of disorders • 130 pages • Narrative descriptions • Pyschodynamic assumptions • Disorder as reaction to other factors • Created for and by psychiatrists
History of DSM-II • Published 1968 w/ ICD-8 • 185 types of disorders • Remained narrative • Remained psychodynamic • Moved away from “reaction” language
History of DSM-III • Published in 1980 w/ ICD-9 • 265 disorders • Multiaxial format introduced • Specific criteria introduced • Movement to “atheoretical” base • Revised in 1987 • 290 Disorders • Homosexuality completely removed
History of the DSM-IV • Published in 1994 w/ ICD-10 • 300 disorders • Revision criteria more stringent • Cultural upgrades • Culture-specific text sections • Glossary of culture-bound syndromes • Outline for cultural formulation • Axis IV more inclusive • New V-codes • Text revision in 2000
DSM-IV-TR:5 Axes (multiaxial) • Axis I – Clinical d/o, other conditions that may be a focus of clinical attention • Axis II – Personality d/o & MR • Axis III – General medical conditions • Axis IV – Psychosocial and environmental px • Axis V – Global assessment of functioning
DSM 5 • Published May 2013 w/ ICD-10 CM (scheduled for Oct. 2014) • Rationale: • Better integration with ICD system diagnostic coding • Some symptom domains may involve several diagnostic categories (“cross-cutting”) • Stimulate new clinical perspectives
DSM 5 • Developmental issues related to dx • Integration of advancements in scientific research • Streamlined autism spectrum, mood dx, substance dx • Specified neurocognitivedx • Change in conceptualizing personality dx
DSM 5 • Included the more-global ICD WHO Disability Assessment Schedule (WHODAS) system for greater accuracy • Included online supplemental info, such as the Cultural Formation Interview (CFI)
DSM 5 Today: Information Provided • Diagnostic features • Subtypes • Associated features and disorders • Specific culture and gender features • Prevalence • Course • Familial pattern • Differential diagnosis • Criteria
The US population today • Random, national sample • 48% met DSM criteria at some point • 21% met criteria for 1 disorder • 13% met criteria for 2 disorders • 14% met criteria for 3+ disorders • 29% met DSM criteria in past year • Less than 40% received treatment (Kessler et al., 1994 as cited in Seligman, 2004)
VIP Point #1 “The symptoms cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning.”
“Merely an expectable and culturally sanctioned response to a particular event…” “deviant behavior (e.g., political, religious, or sexual) nor conflicts that are primarily between the individual and society are mental disorders unless the deviance or conflict is a symptom of a dysfunction in the individual, as described above” (APA, 2000, xxxi) A “DISORDER” IS NOT
VIP Point #2 There is ALWAYS more than one diagnosis in DSM which can explain any complaint!
ETHICAL ISSUES (Braun & Cox, 2005; Daniels, 2001) Informed consent Confidentiality Maintaining records Competence Integrity (i.e., no upcoding or downcoding) Human welfare Conflict of interest Conditions of employment Autonomy
INTENTIONAL MISDIAGNOSIS(Braun & Cox, 2005) • Not all DSM codes are reimbursable • e.g., v-codes, adjustment disorder, Axis II personality disorders • e.g., family or couples issues not in DSM • Upcoding • Downcoding • COMMON, UNETHICAL, & ILLEGAL • Additional, unintended consequences
FOR EXAMPLE You are completing your practicum in a counseling program clinic. You are aware of the stigmas of diagnoses, you are theoretically opposed to diagnoses, and you want to serve your clients the best you can. At the end of the semester you assign V71.09 “no diagnosis” to all of your clients; after all their distress was warranted. In addition, you assign GAF scores based on the highest level of functioning you have observed during your time.
Keeping it in perspective “Become multilingual, accepting DSM as one language exercise among many with all the potential and limitations any language possesses” (Amundson, 1998, p. 2)
Keeping it in perspective “As a text, it is simply a collection of tales of suffering and complaint, a compilation of information of (by its own admission) often transient and mutable quality. It is, at its best, an historical and actuarial account, providing some useful tips on how we might arrange our thoughts and how these thoughts can guide us in the creation of a useful therapy.” (Amundson, 1998, p. 3)
FOR NEXT WEEK… Tab your DSMs No written homework Read, read, read Reading tips… Books & articles VIP Bring questions to class