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anthony
Founder
I think this is one of the most controversial debates around, still lingering ever since the DSM IV hit town nearly 20 years ago; that it turned mental health into a field of profitability which many argue that has hurt mental health more than helped.
Is that the case? Has diagnosis hurt mental health today?
There is certainly a lot of information fore and against this argument, and even depending upon what aspect of the argument you enter upon. For example, some adult diagnoses have been refined or removed. Some childhood diagnoses have been added, to the point where if you take a child near a mental health physician they're labelling them for being a child.
Maybe the more sensible argument is: at what point do you apply a diagnostic label?
There are people, and parents, who want a specific label for monetary or statutory reasons. There are psychicians applying diagnoses to clients and patients after one or two sessions. Can a person really be truly assessed accurately after one or two sessions? I don't think so.
I think many will find this video quite interesting, and eye opening.
Even the DSM V is controversial, before it's even published, as the primary basis for the manuals disorders is agree-ance between psychiatrists globally, not statistical & scientific data. The last five years has seen a lot of statistical data arrive from technology, proving and disproving many facets of mental health. FMRI & MEG are two of the busiest right now, watching brain activity to derive statistical and scientific analysis.
What do you think about mental diagnosis? What evidence do you have to substantiate your thinking?
Maybe another question is the flip side to this... what alternative exists if there weren't standardized diagnoses?
Is that the case? Has diagnosis hurt mental health today?
There is certainly a lot of information fore and against this argument, and even depending upon what aspect of the argument you enter upon. For example, some adult diagnoses have been refined or removed. Some childhood diagnoses have been added, to the point where if you take a child near a mental health physician they're labelling them for being a child.
Maybe the more sensible argument is: at what point do you apply a diagnostic label?
There are people, and parents, who want a specific label for monetary or statutory reasons. There are psychicians applying diagnoses to clients and patients after one or two sessions. Can a person really be truly assessed accurately after one or two sessions? I don't think so.
I think many will find this video quite interesting, and eye opening.
Even the DSM V is controversial, before it's even published, as the primary basis for the manuals disorders is agree-ance between psychiatrists globally, not statistical & scientific data. The last five years has seen a lot of statistical data arrive from technology, proving and disproving many facets of mental health. FMRI & MEG are two of the busiest right now, watching brain activity to derive statistical and scientific analysis.
What do you think about mental diagnosis? What evidence do you have to substantiate your thinking?
Maybe another question is the flip side to this... what alternative exists if there weren't standardized diagnoses?