DSM-5: The Intelligent Clinician’s Guide

Are you prepared for the highly anticipated and long awaited DSM-5? This new CEU course will guide you through the revision.

DSM-5: The Intelligent Clinician’s GuideBased on the book “The Intelligent Clinician’s Guide to the DSM-5®” (2013, 272 pages), this 4-hour CEU course explores all revisions to the latest version of the Diagnostic and Statistics Manual and shows clinicians how they can best apply the strong points and shortcomings of psychiatry’s most contentious resource. The book uses evidence-based critiques and new research to point out where DSM-5 is right, where it is wrong, and where the jury is still out. The author tackles the question – how can we appropriately classify and diagnose mental disorders and address the complexities of distinguishing a psychiatric ‘case’ from a ‘non-case’? He details a flawed DSM-5 ideologically-based production but encourages us to recognize that while we have to use it, we can still work our way around it. In the end he counsels clinicians to “apply extra caution and follow common sense.” Course #40-37 | 30 posttest questions | CE test available online @ https://www.pdresources.org/course/index/6/1153/DSM-5-The-Intelligent-Clinicians-Guide

About the Author:

Joel Paris, MD, is a psychiatrist who is renowned for his research on personality disorders. He obtained an MD from McGill University in 1964, where he also trained in psychiatry. Dr. Paris’ main diagnosis of interest, borderline personality disorder, affects 1% of the population and it is associated with repeated suicide attempts. Dr. Paris’ research program aims to learn more about the causes of personality disorder, how they develop during childhood and adolescence and how patients recover over time. Dr. Paris collaborates with numerous researchers within the McGill network. These collaborations have employed the methods of neuroendocrine challenge, neuropsychological assessment, behaviour genetics and molecular genetics and include studies aimed at the prediction of suicide ideas and suicide attempts in young women. The primary hypothesis is that personality traits (impulsivity and affective instability) will be the predictors of suicidality.

CE Information:

Professional Development Resources is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists; by the National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC) to offer home study continuing education for NCCs (Provider #5590); by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB Provider #1046, ACE Program); by the National Association of Alcoholism & Drug Abuse Counselors (NAADAC Provider #000279); by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences (#PCE1625); by the Florida Boards of Clinical Social Work, Marriage & Family Therapy, and Mental Health Counseling (#BAP346) and Psychology & School Psychology (#50-1635); by the Illinois DPR for Social Work (#159-00531); by the Ohio Counselor, Social Worker & MFT Board (#RCST100501); by the South Carolina Board of Professional Counselors & MFTs (#193); and by the Texas Board of Examiners of Marriage & Family Therapists (#114) and State Board of Social Worker Examiners (#5678).

 

Possible DSM Changes Spark Controversy

By Rick Nauert, PhD – PHD Senior News Editor

Possible DSM Changes Spark ControversyProposed revisions to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), the fat text used to help identify and categorize mental illness, are not sitting well with many mental health professionals and the public.

Suggested changes to the definitions of autism spectrum disorders and depression, among others, are eliciting great concerns. And experts say there are larger concerns about the DSM as a whole.

“Almost no one likes the DSM, but no one knows what to do about it,” said University of Michigan psychiatrist Dr. Randolph Nesse.

The current round of revisions is the fifth since the DSM was originally published by the American Psychiatric Association in 1952.

Nesse and University of Cape Town psychiatrist Dr. Dan Stein combined for an article in the current issue of BMC Medicine titled “Towards a genuinely medical model for psychiatric nosology.”

The article provides a candid appraisal of the difficulty of categorizing mental disorders that the authors expect will not make a lot of their colleagues happy.

“The problem is not the DSM criteria,” Nesse said. “The problem is that the untidy nature of mental disorders is at odds with our wish for a neat, clean classification system.”

The proposed abolition of the grief exclusion, for example, in diagnosing major depression is just one example of a push to define psychiatric disorders according to their causes and brain pathology.

“A huge debate over when depression is abnormal seems likely to be resolved by removing the so-called ‘grief exclusion,’” Nesse said. “At the moment, depression is not diagnosed in the two months after loss of a loved one.

“The result of this proposed change would be that people experiencing normal grief will receive a diagnosis of major depression. Doing this would increase consistency in diagnosing depression, but at the cost of common sense. It’s clear that bereavement is not a mental disorder.”

Nesse and Stein point out that the rest of medicine recognizes many disorders that do not have specific causes.

“Conditions such as congestive heart failure can have many causes,” Nesse said. “This doesn’t bother physicians because they understand what the heart is for, and how it works to circulate blood.”

Furthermore, he said, physicians recognize symptoms such as fever and pain as useful responses, not diseases.

“These symptoms can be pathological when they’re expressed for no good reason, but before considering that possibility, physicians look carefully for some abnormality arousing such symptoms,” Nesse said. “Likewise, the utility of anxiety is recognized, but its disorders are defined by the number and intensity of symptoms, irrespective of the cause.

“It’s vital to recognize that emotions serve functions in the same way that pain, cough and fever do, and that strong negative emotions can be normal responses to challenging or anxiety-provoking situations.”

Instead of specific diseases with specific causes, many mental problems are “somewhat heterogeneous overlapping syndromes that can have multiple causes,” Nesse said.

“Most are not distinct species like birds or flowers. They are more like different plant communities, each with a typical collection of species. Distinguishing tundra from alpine meadow, arboreal forest and Sonoran desert is useful, even though the categories are not entirely homogenous and distinct.”

Source: http://psychcentral.com/news/2012/02/16/possible-dsm-changes-spark-controversy/34909.html

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