Posts Tagged ‘hypersexuality’

Former Head of Psychiatric Billing Bible—Theres no lab test, X-ray or any test that can prove someone has a mental disorder

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Normality is an endangered species.

Psychology Today
By Allen Frances, Former Chairman, DSM-IV Task Force
June 2, 2010

Fads in psychiatric diagnosis come and go and have been with us as long as there has been a psychiatry. The fads meet a deeply felt need to explain, or at least to label, what would otherwise be unexplainable human suffering and deviance. In recent years the pace has picked up and false “epidemics” have come in bunches involving an ever increasing proportion of the population. We are now in the midst of at least three such epidemics- of autism, attention deficit, and childhood bipolar disorder.  And unless it comes to its senses, DSM5 threatens to provoke several more  (hypersexuality, binge eating, mixed anxiety depression, minor neurocognitive, and others).

Fads punctuate what has become a basic background of overdiagnosis. Normality is an endangered species. The NIMH estimates that, in any given year, twenty five percent of the population (that’s almost sixty million people) has a diagnosable mental disorder. A prospective study found that, by age thirty two, fifty percent of the general population had qualified for an anxiety disorder, forty percent for a depression, and thirty percent for alcohol abuse or dependence. Imagine what the rates will be like by the time these people hit fifty, or sixty five, or eighty.  In this brave new world of psychiatric overdiagnosis, will anyone get through life without a mental disorder?

What accounts for the recent upsurge in diagnosis? I feel quite confident we can’t blame it on our brains. Human physiology and human nature change slowly if at all.  Could it be that the surge in mental disorders is caused by our stressful society? I think not.  There is no particular reason to believe that life is any harder now than it has always been-more likely we are the most pampered and protected generation  ever to face its inevitable challenges. It is also tempting to find environmental (eg toxins) or iatrogenic causes(eg vaccinations), but there is no credible evidence supporting either of these. There is really only one viable environmental candidate to explain the growth of mental disorder – the widespread recreational use of psychotropic substances.  But this cannot account for the extent of the “epidemics”, particularly since most have centered on children.

No. The “epidemics” in psychiatry are caused by changing diagnostic fashions – the  people don’t change, the labels do. There are no objective tests in psychiatry-no X-ray, laboratory, or exam finding that says definitively that someone does or does not have a mental disorder.  What is diagnosed as mental disorder is very sensitive to professional and social contextual forces. Rates of disorder rise easily  because mental disorder has such fluid boundaries with normality.

Read entire article:  http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/dsm5-in-distress/201006/psychiatric-fads-and-overdiagnosis

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Psychiatry completes their mission to pathologize every single human behavior into a mental disorder with new DSM

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

The Sunday Times
By Lois Rogers
February 14, 2010

Psychiatrists are to give official recognition to dozens of new mental disorders, including a condition nicknamed “Mary Whitehouse syndrome” — the thrill of being appalled by pornography and other obscenities.

Absexuality appears to have been inspired by the zeal of Whitehouse, the campaigner who railed against smut on television.

The condition is one of many mood disorders and personality traits that are likely to be added to the next edition of the psychiatrists’ “bible”.

The disorders, which also include hypersexuality — the desire for multiple partners, perhaps characterised by the golfer Tiger Woods — reflect changing social patterns.

However, critics believe their classification as psychiatric problems may lead them to be exploited for profit by drug companies.

Other new conditions include sluggish cognitive tempo disorder, which some would regard as simple laziness, and relational disorder, in which two people — often a separating couple — struggle to get on.

People who whinge constantly may be suffering negativistic personality disorder. Intermittent explosive disorder — otherwise known as adult tantrums — is also defined for the first time.

The conditions are named in a draft version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , a key reference book for psychiatrists for more than 50 years.

Read entire article:  http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article7026324.ece

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