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Shedding Light on the DSM-5®: The View from the Trenches

Martha Teater, MA, LMFT, LCAS, LPC

Since the release of DSM-5庐 in the spring of 2013, its critics have complained that the definitions in the new edition are now too broad, too inclusive (or not inclusive enough), too biological (or not biological enough), too vague, too quixotic, too unscientific, too much under the thumb of Big Pharma鈥攖he list goes on. However, we鈥檒l have to make friends with DSM-5, particularly if we expect insurance companies to go on reimbursing us. But how are ordinary clinicians across the country adapting to the specifics of the new manual? As someone who鈥檚 given dozens of workshops on DSM-5 and trained thousands of therapists in its use, I鈥檝e had a front-row seat on how psychotherapists have reacted to the changes it means for their practice.

Overall, most of the participants in my workshops seem to feel that the diagnostic system in the DSM-IV was handy and working just fine for them. They know the DSM-5 Task Force claims changes were made to reflect new research in mental health care, but as one participant remarked, 鈥淚t鈥檚 like the people on the Task Force have never sat in the room with a client. They鈥檙e up in an ivory tower somewhere, dictating how we should be diagnosing our clients, but the changes they鈥檝e made don鈥檛 match up with what I see in my office with real people.鈥

Another psychologist expressed it like this: 鈥淢y concern is helping the person sitting in front of me. Their priority seems to be related to the World Health Organization and the International Classification of Diseases system. I鈥檓 not dealing with abstract concepts. I鈥檓 dealing with real hurting people, people who struggle.鈥

Without a doubt, the subject that arouses the most passionate response in my workshops is when we talk about the loss of the multiaxial system, which used to split a diagnostic impression into five parts. Using the five axes, the evaluation of every patient documented clinical concerns leading to treatment; mental retardation and personality disorders; contributing psychosocial, environmental, and medical conditions; and a global assessment of functioning.

Clinicians believe that losing the five axes means losing the ability to paint a more complete picture of what鈥檚 going on with the people they treat, which runs counter to our field鈥檚 new focus on integrating medical and behavioral health care.

I share some of these concerns. The DSM-5 model of diagnosing leaves us with only a listing of the diagnoses, as opposed to the multiaxial system, which gave us a shorthand way to capture a fuller image of a client. Now, it seems it鈥檒l be much more difficult to adhere to the wise adage that we should be more concerned with the person who has the condition than with the condition the person has.

Another change in the manual that consistently stirs up spirited disapproval is the loss of Asperger鈥檚 disorder as a diagnostic category. Now considered part of autism spectrum disorder, the term Asperger鈥檚 doesn鈥檛 even appear in the new manual. I have yet to have a single workshop participant praise this change.

People with Asperger鈥檚, parents of children with Asperger鈥檚, and autism and Asperger鈥檚 advocacy groups have all voiced their objections as well. They see Asperger鈥檚 as a different condition from autism, and they disagree with the decision to eliminate it as a separate disorder. In addition, they鈥檙e concerned that people with a DSM-IV diagnosis of Asperger鈥檚 won鈥檛 continue to qualify for supportive services. The DSM-5 Task Force has said that most people with a well-established DSM-IV diagnosis of Asperger鈥檚 should meet the criteria for autism spectrum disorder in the DSM-5. If they don鈥檛, clinicians are supposed to evaluate them for social (pragmatic) communication disorder. Of course, this response from the Task Force has done little to allay the concerns of people with Asperger鈥檚 and their advocates, and I鈥檓 sure this controversy will continue to gather force.

Where鈥檚 Sex Addiction?

People inevitably raise their hands as they flip through the handouts and say, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see where sexual addiction and pornography addiction are in the manual. Can you show me?鈥 My answer is no, because those conditions aren鈥檛 in the manual. When I say this, there鈥檚 usually a collective gasp of dismay, which only grows louder when I add that gambling is the only 鈥渂ehavioral addiction鈥 listed. What鈥檚 more, sexual and pornography addictions aren鈥檛 even in the section on conditions needing further study, which is often where things go before they make the cut and become official diagnoses in some future revision.

Although people have clearly voiced criticisms of the new manual, one change that鈥檚 regularly viewed with great approval is the move from using the old Global Assessment of Functioning scale to new severity scales that are specific to different diagnoses. Clinicians applaud the idea of having separate and unique severity scales for anorexia, bulimia, substance-use disorders, oppositional defiant disorder, and other conditions.

They also approve of the new symptom cluster for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This new symptom cluster, which comprises negative alterations in mood and cognitions, was added to the original three clusters from DSM-IV: reexperiencing, avoidance, and increased arousal. Some of the new features of the negative cognitions include persistent, distorted self-blame, persistent negative emotional state, feeling detached and estranged, and persistent inability to experience positive emotions. Clinicians feel that the emphasis on these cognitive changes better reflect ways that people with PTSD often feel most affected by their trauma exposure.

Changes in the language of gender dysphoria also seem to reflect positive movement toward a more open, inclusive point of view. The current wording in DSM-5鈥斺渟ome alternative gender鈥濃攊ndicates that we鈥檙e now thinking of gender as falling along a continuum, rather than being divided between two qualitatively different sexes. This change reflects major social and cultural shifts in the United States.

The Impact on Therapy

Except for a surprisingly modest number of genuinely significant changes, including the newly introduced dimensional scales, DSM-5 is still clearly the offspring of DSM-IV. It鈥檚 most definitely not a radical departure for psychiatric diagnosis, much less a revolution.

The changes in the manual won鈥檛 be critical for doing therapy; most therapists seek to understand how and why clients are troubled before they try to pin them to DSM diagnoses anyway. But the new manual will make a big difference procedurally and bureaucratically.

To get paid, therapists will need to rethink how they define and document their clients鈥 problems according to the template DSM-5 has set before them.
Further, there will be rumblings throughout the pharmaceutical companies, since changes in diagnostic practice notoriously tend to precede an increase in the sale of drugs to newly diagnosed populations.

Certainly, DSM is the book we love to hate. And yet, what else is there? Until we have some huge breakthroughs in neurophysiological research explaining what happens neuron-by-neuron to cause mental disorders, our lumbering mental health enterprise needs a common system of diagnostic categories simply so we can talk coherently to each other about our clients. That being the case, DSM-5 isn鈥檛 really all that bad.

Learn more about Using the DSM-5庐 and ICD-10: The Changing Diagnosis of Mental Disorders.

This post is based on an article originally brought to life by our partner, .

The full article, 鈥,鈥 written by Martha Teater, appeared in the March/April 2014 issue of Psychotherapy Networker magazine.


Topic: DSM

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