I like the APA's work on how they have really integrated "Adjustment Disorder" into the trauma category, which will take up and fit those who do not meet the "traumatic" aspect of the ASD or PTSD diagnosis.
Someone who's partner kills themselves, normal death, etc... will all fall under adjustment disorder, being that the events are stressful, and continued, ie. 3 months + or 12 months + for bereavement... without coming into actual PTSD, which is reserved for the more violent extremes of life's traumatic events.
One thing that really makes me think about this new category of "Trauma & Stressor Related Disorders" is that work towards complex trauma diagnosis can then fit, without it being called PTSD, as that is the biggest issue... that complex trauma is not PTSD, but an actual combination of PTSD + BPD normally, typically only Dissociative when sexual abuse is involved during childhood. It seems DESNOS may be the solution for the DSM V... though it will be a wait and see... as DESNOS is Dissociative + BPD...
I like the chatter though about a more specific diagnosis for what tried to be CPTSD, being more accurate IMO with the experts proposing it, Posttraumatic Personality Disorder (PPD). Now that has substance for accuracy IMHO for what complex trauma entails, because so much of complex trauma all comes back to someone close abusing / allowing abuse to occur during developmental years, or subjected long periods in adulthood that change the brain back to childlike. It is the 3 key issues with complex trauma... silencing, secrecy and denial, but one or both parties, which continues to perpetuate further abuse.
PPD is literally a combination of PTSD + DESNOS, as DESNOS is a combination of Dissociation + BPD, pretty much.
Seems even PPD though has not yet made ground of slipping more towards the personality spectrum for complex trauma... so I can see a future more accurate diagnosis coming that covers complex trauma, now with a more accurate grouping away from anxiety... as complex trauma is anything but anxiety based.
Anyway... that is off-topic and rambling more relating to complex trauma aspects.