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anthony
Founder
Here is an interesting debate topic that I have thought about for many years now, whether or not PTSD criterion A should be proven prior to a diagnosis being given. The military already do this, hence the military is one area where PTSD is not just given, but more has to be substantiated through documentation of location served, incident reports, service history and so forth.
The reason I raise this, is because PTSD is the only diagnosis in the entire mental health doctrine where for legal purposes, the burden of proof is already provided in criterion A. So if having this diagnosis has legal implications in a court, then why shouldn't the diagnosis be first scrutinized to meet such burdens of proof to begin with before being given?
It is becoming more and more common for people trying to falsely obtain a PTSD diagnosis to use in upcoming legal battles as an excuse for their actions or to mitigate themselves, or obtain compensation that their not rightfully entitled too.
I believe this could be easily done even in the civilian populous, through requirement of reporting events to police for investigation, accident documentation can be used that the trauma did exist, other family members can be used to ascertain the validity of abuse to a child, etc etc.
What do you think about the reality of this, taking into account, PTSD is not like any other diagnosis in the world, as it is the only one that meets a legal burden of proof just by having been given it, which states you have endured a traumatic event, by nothing more than your word, without any evidence, not even another family member to substantiate some event or suspicion of event/s that occurred.
Me personally, the more I think about this, and having to meet this criterion of proof myself with the military to be given a PTSD diagnosis based on the traumatic events that I endured, I would have to say yes, I think it would be suitable to atleast require some type of proof to substantiate claims made, even the most simplest, being incidents are reported to police so police can investigate. Maybe more real criminals (abusers), would be put away, outed, shamed and have records, compared to just being an unknown offender.
What do you think?
Debates Have Rules
The reason I raise this, is because PTSD is the only diagnosis in the entire mental health doctrine where for legal purposes, the burden of proof is already provided in criterion A. So if having this diagnosis has legal implications in a court, then why shouldn't the diagnosis be first scrutinized to meet such burdens of proof to begin with before being given?
It is becoming more and more common for people trying to falsely obtain a PTSD diagnosis to use in upcoming legal battles as an excuse for their actions or to mitigate themselves, or obtain compensation that their not rightfully entitled too.
I believe this could be easily done even in the civilian populous, through requirement of reporting events to police for investigation, accident documentation can be used that the trauma did exist, other family members can be used to ascertain the validity of abuse to a child, etc etc.
What do you think about the reality of this, taking into account, PTSD is not like any other diagnosis in the world, as it is the only one that meets a legal burden of proof just by having been given it, which states you have endured a traumatic event, by nothing more than your word, without any evidence, not even another family member to substantiate some event or suspicion of event/s that occurred.
Me personally, the more I think about this, and having to meet this criterion of proof myself with the military to be given a PTSD diagnosis based on the traumatic events that I endured, I would have to say yes, I think it would be suitable to atleast require some type of proof to substantiate claims made, even the most simplest, being incidents are reported to police so police can investigate. Maybe more real criminals (abusers), would be put away, outed, shamed and have records, compared to just being an unknown offender.
What do you think?
Debates Have Rules
- State your opinion / beliefs, but DO NOT defend them, as opinions and beliefs are not correct or fact, they are a personal to you alone.
- There is no requirement to attack another for their opinions or beliefs, again, they own them and have a right to them.
- The ultimate responsibility in your response, or no response, lay with you. You own your actions and what you say, nobody else.