Approaches to classification Flashcards
Two contempory classification systems
- ICD-10 (1992)
- DSM 4 (1994)
- American Psychiatric Association produces DSM system
- WHO commissioned ICD10
- DSM 5 came out in 2013 but there has been much criticism of it and it has not been adopted much except by clinicians communicating with insurers in the USA
Operationalised approach
- DSM 3 is an example
- uses precise clinical description of disorders with predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria
- enables algorithm-based clinical diagnosis
- basically a check list
Characteristic symptoms
- pertinent for diagnosis
- often found in lots of disorders
Discriminating symptoms
- e.g thought insertion
- necessary for diagnosis since they are not found in other diseases
Pathognomic symptoms
- if present strongly favour one diagnosis over antoher
- specific to condition
Atheoretical approach
- diseases are described according to observed phenomenology
- classification is not based on the understanding of what might be causing the disturbances
- no theory forms the basis of classifications, only neutral observations
- seen in psychoanalysis
Descriptive approach
- refers to classifying illnesses on the basis of what constitutes the illness rather than what causes it
- basis of atheoretical approaches
Categorical approach
- current classification systems
- we can say if something meets or doesnt meet the diagnostic criteria
- however, gives rise to vague categories and severity is difficult to indicated
Multi-axial approach
- helps give holistic assessment
- ICD-10 uses 3 axises. Axis 1- mental disorder, Axis 2- degree of disability, Axis 3- psychosocial problems
- DSM-5 uses 5 axes. Axis 1-clinical disorders, Axis 2-personality disorders/ mental retardation, Axis 3- general medical conditions, Axis 4- psychosocial and environmental problems, Axis 5- Global assessment of functioning
ICD-10
- has 21 chapters
- mental disorders= F
- 4 versions of ICD10 for mental disorders exist- CDDG (clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines), DCR (diagnositc criteria for research), primary care version, clinical coding manual
Proposed changes to ICD11
- presumed aetiological groupings rather than conventional symptoms based groupings
- neurodevelopmental disorders will be in chapter 1
- Bipolar will be split from depressive disorders and placed in a separate chapter
- Dissociative disorders will be split from stress-induced disorders
- OCD will be separated from anxiety disorders
- Factitious disorders will be in separate chapters
- conditions relating to substance missuse will be split up
DSM 6
-in 3 sections
Section 1- intro
Section 2- outline
3- list of conditions
-removal of subtypes of schizophrenia, 3 core symptoms (delusions, hallucinations and disorganised speech) seen. Bereavement no longer an exclusion for depression
-aspergers merged with ASD
-ADHD age criteria relaxed
-anorexia does not require amennorhea
-OCD and PTSD are different chapters to Anxiety
-new hoarding disorder, excoriation disorder