don't have the restriction of trauma having had to include actual or threatened death (unless that's what catastrophic refers to in this context?)
I believe it's what catastrophic is meant to refer to. The looseness of the language here simply gives the diagnostician more room to maneuver. Narrowing the terms in DSM to only include death, catastrophic injury, or sexual violence is a way to exclude something that could be considered 'serious' injury - not life-threatening or life-changing.
But human pain is a slippery thing, if it is a thing at all: how it is registered and measured depends on philosophical and sociomoral considerations that evolve over time and cannot simply be reduced to a technical matter.
Mental health diagnosis, period, is philosophical, not evidence based.
Yes, it is. It's why studying the brain is so significant, for everything we call mental health. I do think we will see quantitative scientific diagnosis of mental health issues in our lifetime - I'm not sure if they will get all of them, but I really believe they will have made real, practical progress over the next 20 years. Here's hoping, anyway. But until then, what we are left looking for is language that tries to capture an experience common enough to yield similar results.
If we didn't have x-ray capability, and had to describe what sort of situation might cause a broken joint - knowing that there would be no way of really
proving it was broken - that's the kind of description that PTSD is reaching for. Catastrophic, blunt-force, trauma, bent beyond normal parameters, etc.
Post-traumatic stress disorder legitimised their “victimhood,” gave them moral exculpation, and guaranteed them a disability pension because the diagnosis could be attested to by a doctor; this was a potent combination.
In the US, this is very important to remember. Glad you looked it up,
@anthony. And circling back around to
@digger's comparison with the ICD - in the US, all these diagnoses ultimately link to medical care, which is for-profit. So the US has reasons for wanting a diagnosis to be as exclusionary/narrow as possible. I don't even know if those reasons are nefarious, on the committee level - it's just deeply entrenched in our system. If it's too easy to be diagnosed, then it's too easy to require health care, and too many disability claims can bankrupt the social security system. Ish. That's a very loose description, but I'm sure the point is clear.
How invested are we in being exclusionary?
I'm throwing this on the table again. I still think direct exposure needs to be specified, as below. I've adjusted the media clause to be more open ended.
A. Direct exposure (via experiencing or witnessing) to actual or immediate threat of: death, catastrophic injury, and/or sexual violence. (Does not apply to exposure via electronic media, television, movies, pictures, or text, unless the exposure is of significant frequency and duration.)