The DSM-5 was officially released today. We will be covering it in the weeks to come here on the blog and over at Psych Central Professional in a series of upcoming articles detailing the major changes.
In the meantime, here is an overview of the big changes. We sat in on a conference call that the American Psychiatric Association (APA) had in order to introduce the new version of the diagnostic reference manual used primarily by clinicians in the U.S. to diagnose mental disorders. It is called the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders and is now in its fifth major revision (DSM-5).
James Scully, Jr., MD, CEO of the APA, kicked off the call by remarking that the DSM-5 will be a “critical guidebook for clinicians” — a theme echoed by the other speakers on the call.
Why has it taken on such a large “role [both] in society as well as medicine?” he asked. Dr. Scully believes it’s because of the prevalence of mental disorders in general, touching most people’s lives (or someone we know).
The APA has published three separate drafts of the manual on their website, and in doing so received over 13,000 comments from 2010 – 2012, as well as thousands of emails and letters. Every single comment was read and evaluated. This was an unprecedented scale of openness and transparency never before seen in the revision of a diagnostic manual.
“The manual is first and foremost a guidebook for clinicians,” reiterated David Kupfer, M.D., DSM-5 task force chair, who walked us through the major changes detailed below.
1. Three major sections of the DSM-5
I. Introduction and clear information on how to use the DSM.
II. Provides information and categorical diagnoses.
III. Section III provides self-assessment tools, as well as categories that require more research.
2. Section II – Disorders
Organization of chapters is designed to demonstrate how disorders are related to one another.
Throughout the entire manual, disorders are framed in age, gender, developmental characteristics.
Multi-axial system has been eliminated. “Removes artificial distinctions” between medical and mental disorders.
DSM-5 has approximately the same number of conditions as DSM-IV.
3. The Big Changes in Specific Disorders
Autism
There is now a single condition called autism spectrum disorder, which incorporates 4 previous separate disorders. As the APA states:
ASD now encompasses the previous DSM-IV autistic disorder (autism), Asperger’s disorder, childhood disintegrative disorder, and pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified.
ASD is characterized by 1) deficits in social communication and social interaction and 2) restricted repetitive behaviors, interests, and activities (RRBs). Because both components are required for diagnosis of ASD, social communication disorder is diagnosed if no RRBs are present.
Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder
Childhood bipolar disorder has a new name — “intended to address issues of over-diagnosis and over-treatment of bipolar disorder in children.” This can be diagnosed in children up to age 18 years who exhibit persistent irritability and frequent episodes of extreme behavioral dyscontrol (e.g., they are out of control).
ADHD
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been modified somewhat, especially to emphasize that this disorder can continue into adulthood. The one “big” change (if you can call it that) is that you can be diagnosed with ADHD as an adult if you meet one less symptom than if you are a child.
While that weakens the criteria marginally for adults, the criteria are also strengthened at the same time. For instance, the cross-situational requirement has been strengthened to “several” symptoms in each setting (you can’t be diagnosed with ADHD if it only happens in one setting, such as at work).
The criteria were also relaxed a bit as the symptoms now have to had appeared before age 12, instead of before age 7.
Bereavement Exclusion Removal
In the DSM-IV, if you were grieving the loss of a loved one, technically you couldn’t be diagnosed with major depression disorder in the first 2 months of your grief. (I’m not sure where this arbitrary 2 month figure came from, because it certainly reflects no reality or research.). This exclusion was removed in the DSM-5. Here are the reasons they gave:
The first is to remove the implication that bereavement typically lasts only 2 months when both physicians and grief counselors recognize that the duration is more commonly 1 — 2 years. Second, bereavement is recognized as a severe psychosocial stressor that can precipitate a major depressive episode in a vulnerable individual, generally beginning soon after the loss. When major depressive disorder occurs in the context of bereavement, it adds an additional risk for suffering, feelings of worthlessness, suicidal ideation, poorer somatic health, worse interpersonal and work functioning, and an increased risk for persistent complex bereavement disorder, which is now described with explicit criteria in Conditions for Further Study in DSM-5 Section III. Third, bereavement-related major depression is most likely to occur in individuals with past personal and family histories of major depressive episodes. It is genetically influenced and is associated with similar personality characteristics, patterns of comorbidity, and risks of chronicity and/or recurrence as non — bereavement-related major depressive episodes. Finally, the depressive symptoms associated with bereavement-related depression respond to the same psychosocial and medication treatments as non — bereavement-related depression. In the criteria for major depressive disorder, a detailed footnote has replaced the more simplistic DSM-IV exclusion to aid clinicians in making the critical distinction between the symptoms characteristic of bereavement and those of a major depressive episode.
PTSD
More attention is now paid to behavioral symptoms that accompany PTSD in the DSM-5. It now includes four primary major symptom clusters:
- Reexperiencing
- Arousal
- Avoidance
- Persistent negative alterations in cognitions and mood
“Posttraumatic stress disorder is now developmentally sensitive in that diagnostic thresholds have been lowered for children and adolescents. Furthermore, separate criteria have been added for children age 6 years or younger with this disorder.”
Major and Mild Neurocognitive Disorder
Major Neurocognitive Disorder now subsumes dementia and the amenstic disorder.
But a new disorder, Mild Neurocognitive Disorder, was also added. “There was concern we may have added a disorder that wasn’t ‘important’ enough.”
“The impact of the decline was noticeable, but clinicians lacked a diagnosis to give patients,” noted Dr. Kupfer. There were two reasons for this change: “(1) Opportunity for early detection. The earlier the better for patients with these symptoms. (2) It also encourages an early effective treatment plan, ” before dementia sets in.
Other New & Notable Disorders
Both binge eating disorder and premenstrual dysphoric disorder and now official, “real” diagnoses in the DSM-5 (they were not prior to this, although still commonly diagnosed by clinicians). Hoarding disorder is also now recognized as a real disorder, separate from OCD, “which reflects persistent difficulty dis-carding or parting with possessions due to a perceived need to save the items and distress associated with discarding them. Hoarding disorder may have unique neurobiological correlates, is associated with significant impairment, and may respond to clinical intervention.”
Jeffrey Lieberman, MD, President-Elect of the APA reminded us that the DSM-5 is not a pop-psychology book intended for consumers: “[It is] a guide, an aide to assist clinicians to … help facilitate treatment.”
The APA also noted that a large number of sessions — 21 — will be dedicated to the DSM-5 this weekend at the APA’s annual meeting.
Commenting on the swirling controversy regarding the DSM-5, that perhaps the diagnostic system isn’t good enough, Dr. Lieberman said, “It can’t create the knowledge, it reflects the current state of our knowledge.”
“We can’t keep waiting for such breakthroughs,” (in reference to biomarkers and laboratory tests). “Clinicians and patients need the DSM-5 now.
Critics have accused the DSM-5 of lowering diagnostic thresholds across the board, making it far easier for a person to be diagnosed with a mental disorder. Lieberman disagrees, however: “How [the DSM-5] is applied reflects critical practice… it’s not necessarily because of the criteria [themselves]. It’s because of the way the criteria are applied.”
Want to learn more about the
specific changes in the DSM-5?
Stay updated by visiting our DSM-5 Resource Guide.
18 comments
“premenstrual dysphoric disorder [is now an] official, ‘real’ diagnosis in the DSM-5”
congrats, PMS is now an officially recognized mental health disorder
^PMDD is totally different from “PMS.” It’s where a woman is extremely irritable amd clincally depressed in the days leading to her period. TOTALLY different from the bit of discomfort most women experience.
Question, the ‘MULTI-AXIAL’ system was removed to avoid artificial distinctions between disorders. Does that mean, say someone suffering from Hypothyroidism leading to Clinical Depression be classified under ‘Depression’? Would love to know. Thanks
So good to get the psychcentral blog. Will follow.
I’ve tweeted and posted on F/b how easily people
are misled, and open to Big Pharma conspiracy
theory if they don’t get authoritative information.
More “disorders”, more anti-depressants and anti-psychotics, more money for big pharma, more branding of people instead of trying to find a way to integrate the symptoms-based algorithms into actual disease states with a biological basis, these guys just likes to create more confusion. If your little child doesn’t always listen to you its a disease; how about if your psychiatrist doesn’t understand or listen, and simplifies the various nuances of life into a disorder? Does s/he has ADD then? The whole field of Psychiatry is a peudo-science, with hardly any hard data or evidence based treatment. Just a bunch of opinionated pseudo-intellectuals gathering around a round table to write a set of rules- garbage in, garbage out ! Psychiatry is still locked in the dark ages.
I am sort of there with you. I actually suffer from depression and anxiety, going on 15 years now. But my doctor and counselor constantly are looking for a new diagnosis because the treatment isn’t working. I’ve done the research, I know I’m depressed. But it just seems like big pharma companies keep making new mental health drugs, and new mental health issues are “discovered”, without any real, provable evidence. I want to know the SCIENCE behind what causes depression… Not just a group of stranger’s best guesses
Thanks for the post. Do you know what the changes are regarding Narcissistic Personality Disorder? I know there was a discussion about changing the definition of this disorder. Given the massive role that people with this disorder play in our societies, this is an important definition to get right. Thanks.
I am looking for information as to what changes narcissism NPD as incurred with the change of the DSM-5. Any help appreciated.
Geoff
The multiaxial system was removed, in my opinion, to make the biological focus so narrow, a pin would struggle to get through.
The more things change, the more tread marks on the faces of the public at risk.
Like that 2 way street the APA claims to be using?!
Every change in here is about being able to code a normal or enviromentally unhealthy driven behavior in a way that an insurance claim can be processed and acceptete. “Oh your feeling down cause you don’t want to go to work? Code it as grieving and depression and here take this pill.” “Oh, nobody taught you how to deal with your emotions and during you period you feel bad, even though tens of thousands of years women have had periods without needing a diagnosis? Here take this pill, we now have a code for PMS that your insurance company will pay.” Then again, when it comes to psychology, we are talking about a profession that won a Nobel Prize only 50 yrs ago for drilling a hole in peoples heads and scrambling their PFC.
Distinction: they have a code for PMDD that allows medication to be covered by insurance, but PMS is still over the counter.
Does anyone know if they changed anything for Borderline Personality Disorder. I heard rumors of a possible name change?
Borderline Personality Disorder is now Bipolar Disorder 3, or 4, or is it now 5?
Spectrums become so blurred, that is why we have prisms, so we can enjoy the colors that compose light.
Ironic isn’t it, the black and white of a personality disorder now can be blurred with the terminology of a book that makes “War and Peace” an easier reading.
Ironic actually is not the right word, it really is pathetic. You can’t get reimbursed for a primary Axis 2 Disorder as a diagnosis. So, the APA has fixed that.
Instead of calling this the DSM, they should just rename it the MCM: Managed Care Manual. Or, the SOM, the Sell Out Manual. Or, most accurate, the GOGM, Greedy Old Guys Manual.
You get the point I hope.
Happy Memorial Day.
It was speculated early 2012 that “self-injury” or “non-suicidal self-injury”, or “deliberate self-harm syndrome” will be included in the DSM-5 as a distinctive behaviour or diagnosis. Can anyone tell me if this proposal was passed and wehter “self-injury” or deliberate self-harm syndrome” is now classified in the DSM-5 manual?
Quite a few people in these comments have asked about specific changes in the DSM-5. We have prepared a 90-minute video presentation and 28 pages of handouts covering *all* of the new diagnoses, removed diagnoses, renamed diagnoses, and DSM-IV diagnoses that have been combined or divided in DSM-5. The instructor, Rachel Michaelsen LCSW, was a Collaborating Clinician Investigator for the DSM-5. The course offers 1.5 CEU hours for California BBS practitioners. http://psyte-online.com/DSM-5-online-courses.html
These changes are good and make sense to me.
Thank you.
The changes to ADHD, autism and premenstrual dysphoric disorder are all relevant to my family. I applaud the changes they make sense.