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DSM-IV-TR as the standard diagnostic manual
The DSM-IV-TR
(Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition,
Text-Revised) is considered the standard diagnostic manual for
establishing the diagnosis of various mental disorders. Of note, in its
introduction, a few caveats are outlined.
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First, mental
disorder implies a distinction from physical disorders that is a relic of
mind/body dualism.
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Second, mental
disorder lacks a consistent operational definition that covers all
situations.
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Third, the
categorical approach has limitations in that discrete entities are
assumed when in fact there are no absolute boundaries dividing one
disorder from another.
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Fourth, the
criteria for each disorder serve as guidelines only and should not be
applied in either a "cookbook fashion" or in an "excessively flexible"
manner.
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Finally, the
purpose of the manual is primarily to enhance agreement among clinicians
and investigators and is not to imply that any "condition meets legal or
other non-medical criteria for what constitutes mental disease, mental
disorder, or mental disability".
It is critical
to keep these caveats in mind, as it is easy to get caught in a
physician's diagnosis, believing that it is set in stone, which it is
not. As new information is acquired in treatment, the diagnosis and
treatment plan may change. Additionally, it is not uncommon for
clinicians to disagree on the diagnosis because of the previously
mentioned caveats. When reading the various criteria individually, it is
easy to identify with many of them and jump to the conclusion that one
has the described condition. Only time and the guidance of a skilled
clinician who is probing and comprehensive in his or her questioning will
help to establish a diagnosis that leads to an effective treatment plan.
The ability to establish a diagnosis is important in developing a
treatment plan that restores one's health, and if the treatment plan
fails, the first order of business is to reconsider the diagnosis.

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