Nice kells... thanks. I think where the differences lay, is which version publication you are diagnosed.
[DLMURL="http://www.ptsdforum.org/thread118.html"]PTSD Assessment[/DLMURL] outlines the diagnostic criteria of the DSM IV, however; the DSM IV (TR) is the latest revision, and it only includes a footnote about Complex PTSD, as before the (TR) version, complex PTSD was not an official diagnosis.
What I just found interesting though, is it looks as though the DSM V is going to break up PTSD into different types, like depression is, where you will have:
- Acute PTSD (More than 1 month, less than 3)
- Chronic PTSD (3 months or more)
- Combat PTSD
- Complex PTSD
This is going to be interesting... at present though, only two official diagnosis are written within the DSM, being acute and chronic, which can can read from the actual
DSM IV (TR) at the bottom of the symptoms. BehaveNet is the official site to house the copyright version of the DSM. As you can see, only really two official versions of diagnosis are present today.
What I do get though from research that kells presented, and this one from, is that the DSM V will break them up, though currently complex PTSD is actually not a real diagnosis, because it is only actually mentioned in the footnote of the paper copy of the DSM IV (TR) currently, where this Dr. Judith Herman wants to actually characterise the diagnostic criteria much differently. So at present, by the looks of things, complex PTSD is not an official diagnosis, more one just made up and agreed upon by certain physicians, and not actually legally documented until DSM V is released.
I don't even really understand why they would want to categorise Combat PTSD for, because the circumstances you get it are all unique, the end result of PTSD is the same, regardless of the label they attach.
I think the more doctors stuff about with these diagnosis of mental health, the worse the outcome for the patients are going to be.