From The New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/12/opinion/break-up-the-psychiatric-monopoly.html?_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20120512
By ALLEN FRANCES
Published: May 11, 2012
Published: May 11, 2012
AT its annual meeting this week, the American Psychiatric Association
did two wonderful things: it rejected one reckless proposal that would
have exposed nonpsychotic children to unnecessary and dangerous
antipsychotic medication and another that would have turned the
existential worries and sadness of everyday life into an alleged mental
disorder.
But the association is still proceeding with other suggestions that could potentially expand the boundaries of psychiatry
to define as mentally ill tens of millions of people now considered
normal. The proposals are part of a major undertaking: revisions to what
is often called the “bible of psychiatry” — the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, or D.S.M. The fifth edition of the manual is scheduled for publication next May.
I
was heavily involved in the third and fourth editions of the manual but
have reluctantly concluded that the association should lose its nearly
century-old monopoly on defining mental illness. Times have changed, the
role of psychiatric diagnosis has changed, and the association has
changed. It is no longer capable of being sole fiduciary of a task that
has become so consequential to public health and public policy.
Psychiatric
diagnosis was a professional embarrassment and cultural backwater until
D.S.M.-3 was published in 1980. Before that, it was heavily influenced
by psychoanalysis, psychiatrists could rarely agree on diagnoses and nobody much cared anyway.
D.S.M.-3
stirred great professional and public excitement by providing specific
criteria for each disorder. Having everyone work from the same playbook
facilitated treatment planning and revolutionized research in psychiatry
and neuroscience.
Surprisingly, D.S.M.-3 also caught on with the
general public and became a runaway best seller, with more than a
million copies sold, many more than were needed for professional use.
Psychiatric diagnosis crossed over from the consulting room to the
cocktail party. People who previously chatted about the meaning of their
latest dreams began to ponder where they best fit among D.S.M.’s
intriguing categories.
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