Millions of people, including shy or defiant children, may
be wrongly labeled mentally ill according to an upcoming revision of the
influential Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). Many
experts are calling new categories in the book "silly" at best. At worst, they
are "worrying and dangerous," categorizing people who are grieving or who have
unconventional romantic lives as having mental disorders.
The DSM is published by the American Psychiatric Association
and is considered the diagnostic "bible" for mental health medicine
internationally. The main concern is that certain diagnoses risk diminishing
the seriousness of mental illness and put a medical label on behaviors that
most people would consider normal or even just mildly eccentric. Conditions
such as "apathy syndrome" or "oppositional defiant disorder" are raising
widespread concerns. More than 11,000 health professionals have already signed
a petition asking that the fifth edition of the DSM be halted in its
development and rethought.
The new DSM could also give serial rapists and sex abusers
labels like “paraphilic coercive disorder,” which is troublesome as it may give
them an opportunity to avoid prison by providing what could be seen as a
medical excuse for their behavior.
David Pilgrim of Britain’s University of Central Lancashire
made the point that it was difficult to avoid the conclusion that DSM-5 will
help the interests of the drug companies. "Madness and misery exist, but they come in
many shapes and sizes," he tells Reuters. "We risk treating the
experience and conduct of people as if they are botanical specimens waiting to
be identified and categorized in rigid boxes.”
In previous editions of the DSM, people who had normal human reactions
like suffering low moods after losing a loved one would not have been thought
to have a depressive illness. In the new version, a child who says "no" too
many times would be diagnosed with "oppositional defiant disorder" for performing "deliberate actions to annoy others."
Other problematic diagnoses for experts include "gambling disorder" and "internet addiction disorder."
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