firecat: damiel from wings of desire tasting blood on his fingers. text "i has a flavor!" (Default)
firecat (attention machine in need of calibration) ([personal profile] firecat) wrote2013-01-17 12:11 pm

Turning physical illness into mental illness

The DSM-IV had several different diagnoses for people who were distressed about their health (somatoform disorders). The DSM-V will have one. That seems like it might be good, but the criteria for diagnosing people with this condition might have been broadened to the point where the diagnosis might be misapplied.

http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/turning-straw-gold/201301/your-physical-illness-may-now-be-labeled-mental-disorder
"People can be diagnosed with Somatic Symptom Disorder if, for at least six months, they’ve had one or more symptoms that are distressing and/or disruptive to their daily life, and if they have one...of the following three reactions:

Criteria #1: disproportionate thoughts about the seriousness of their symptom(s);

Criteria #2: a high level of anxiety about their symptoms or health; or

Criteria #3: devoting excessive time and energy to their symptoms or health concerns.

Can you see how this diagnosis potentially includes everything from a stomach ache to cancer?
I'm of several minds about this.

Mind 1: I have chronic physical health issues and chronic mental health issues. When my mood disorder isn't well controlled, I absolutely fret about my health a lot more. So I think the state of mind they are describing is something real for some people.

Mind 2: But does the state of mind really need its own name and diagnosis? Can't they just include this as an aspect of mood disorders or obsessive disorders in general? Do anxiety or obsessive thoughts about your health require special treatments that are different from other anxiety and obsession treatments?

Mind 3: I'm concerned that this diagnosis will be used to deny people tests that could determine why they are having symptoms, or deny them treatments that would help them manage the symptoms of their chronic conditions. I'm concerned that it will be disproportionately applied to women and people of color.

More: http://dxrevisionwatch.com/2012/05/26/somatic-symptom-disorder-could-capture-millions-more-under-mental-health-diagnosis/
To meet requirements for Somatization Disorder (300.81) in DSM-IV, a considerably more rigorous criteria set needed to be fulfilled: a history of many medically unexplained symptoms before the age of thirty, resulting in treatment sought or psychosocial impairment. The diagnostic threshold was set high – a total of eight or more medically unexplained symptoms from four, specified symptom groups, with at least four pain and two gastrointestinal symptoms.

In DSM-5, the requirement for eight symptoms is dropped to just one.
lilacsigil: 12 Apostles rocks, text "Rock On" (12 Apostles)

[personal profile] lilacsigil 2013-01-18 03:11 am (UTC)(link)
What concerns me is "devoting excessive time and energy to their symptoms or health concerns." Managing a complex health condition takes up a lot of time and energy and it would be really easy to view perfectly regular health monitoring and organising medical care to be "excessive" to someone else.

For example, when I go to see a specialist, I'm going to have at least 5 hours in the car. So I carefully plan my activities around that to make sure I have the time and energy to not just attend the appointment, but avoid being sick afterwards. When I had undiagnosed cancer, I went back to the doctors weekly - sometimes more often - trying to find what was wrong with me and it was only that persistence that got me a diagnosis. Was it "excessive"? Did I have "a high level of anxiety"? Yes, but only because the doctors in question were failing to do their jobs.

I think your velociraptor/asthma comparison isn't really comparing the situation, either, because one is imaginary. What about asthma vs car travel? Both are perfectly reasonable concerns that can then interfere with their lives, and I'm not really sure why they would require different treatments.
staranise: A star anise floating in a cup of mint tea (Default)

[personal profile] staranise 2013-01-18 08:26 am (UTC)(link)
In which case it really does boil down to how one defines "excessive", since the fact is that in the face of many illnesses, the appropriate and proportionate response is "freak the fuck out until someone takes you seriously." In the face of chronic pain, a reasonable analysis of likelihood can tell you that if you want to function next week, you can't make dinner and do dishes tonight. And it would take a specialist experienced with illness and disability to be able to tell the difference between proportionate and excessive.

The point of the asthma example is that there are people who do disproportionately worry about their symptoms. For the purposes of the example, assume that the person would physically be able to go on these outings without having an asthma attack; they are vastly overestimating the probability out of anxiety and fear. If they are treated with psychotherapy, they are able to make more accurate assessments, and can be more functional. This is a real thing that happens in the real world, and that's somatic symptom disorder. Those people need treatment too. We can't just pretend that problem doesn't exist because it can be overgeneralized.
Edited 2013-01-18 08:28 (UTC)
lilacsigil: 12 Apostles rocks, text "Rock On" (12 Apostles)

[personal profile] lilacsigil 2013-01-18 08:40 am (UTC)(link)
Those people need treatment too.

Indeed they do, but considering the medical milieu that people with chronic conditions deal with, I cannot make myself believe for a moment that somatic symptom disorder is going to be used appropriately outside, perhaps, at a stretch, the discipline of psychology. I understand why you think it's appropriate to name and treat this problem, but I don't understand why you think it's appropriate to separate it from other disproportionate anxieties that affect daily life.

The broadness of the definition and making it a different thing to other disproportionate but not imaginary anxieties is highly inappropriate considering that it's not just "a specialist experienced with illness and disability" who will be using it. If diagnostic procedures, access to treatment and access to mental health care were all in an ideal state, then I think this disorder might reasonably be classified as a disorder. As it stands, it's another tool to cause harm to any patient who does not suit the doctor's opinions and resources.