- Moderator
- #37
Sideways
VIP Member
I have a small issue with the argument: "If it isn't officially in the DSM or ICD then it doesn't exist..."
If you need my DSM diagnosis, I have PTSD. If you want some more information, I have complex PTSD. As opposed to, say, combat PTSD.
If a person came to me and said "I have arachnophobia, and I'm about to start exposure therapy for that", I'm going to have a pretty good understanding of what their issue is. A much (much) better understanding than if they said to me "I have a Simple Phobia".
Simple Phobia is the 'official' diagnosis, and Arachnophobia doesn't "exist" in the DSM. To the person dealing with the Arachnophobe, whether it be a supporter or pdoc or whatever, "Arachnophobia", for all that it doesn't technically 'exist', still works for me as a pretty helpful way for that person to tell me what their mental health condition is.
Neither the DSM nor the ICD have a monopoly over the way we define or describe our health issues. In some circumstances (like when you're claiming insurance), you have to use the prescribed diagnostic guide when describing health issues, but that doesn't mean that anything outside those issues "doesn't exist".
If you need my DSM diagnosis, I have PTSD. If you want some more information, I have complex PTSD. As opposed to, say, combat PTSD.
If a person came to me and said "I have arachnophobia, and I'm about to start exposure therapy for that", I'm going to have a pretty good understanding of what their issue is. A much (much) better understanding than if they said to me "I have a Simple Phobia".
Simple Phobia is the 'official' diagnosis, and Arachnophobia doesn't "exist" in the DSM. To the person dealing with the Arachnophobe, whether it be a supporter or pdoc or whatever, "Arachnophobia", for all that it doesn't technically 'exist', still works for me as a pretty helpful way for that person to tell me what their mental health condition is.
Neither the DSM nor the ICD have a monopoly over the way we define or describe our health issues. In some circumstances (like when you're claiming insurance), you have to use the prescribed diagnostic guide when describing health issues, but that doesn't mean that anything outside those issues "doesn't exist".