Discussion: Personality Disorders
Personality disorders can arise through trauma, and they often carry added stigma. In this Discussion, you analyze a case study focused on a personality disorder while also reflecting on how power, privilege, and stigma affect such diagnoses.
To prepare: Review the case provided by your instructor for this week’s Discussion and consider your differential diagnostic process for them. Be sure to consider any past diagnoses and what influence those might have on their current diagnosis and needs. Finally, return to the Week 1 resources on stigma and reflect on stigma related to personality disorders.
By Day 4
Post a 300- to 500-word response in which you address the following:
- Provide the full DSM-5 diagnosis. Remember, a full diagnosis should include the name of the disorder, ICD-10-CM code, specifiers, severity, and the Z codes (other conditions that may need clinical attention). Keep in mind a diagnosis covers the most recent 12 months.
- Explain the diagnosis by matching the symptoms identified in the case to the specific criteria for the diagnosis.
- Support your decision by identifying the symptoms which meet specific criteria for each diagnosis.
- Identify any close differentials and why they were eliminated. Concisely support your decisions with the case materials and readings.
- Explain how diagnosing a client with a personality disorder may affect their treatment.
- Analyze how power and privilege may influence who is labeled with a personality disorder and which types of personality disorders.
- Identify how trauma affects the case, either precipitating the diagnosis and/or resulting from related symptoms or treatment of diagnosis.
Required Readings:
Morrison, J. (2014). Diagnosis made easier (2nd ed.). New York, NY: Guilford Press.
American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Personality Disorders. In Diagnostic and Statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). Arlington, VA: Author. doi:10.1176/appi.books.9780890425596.dsm18
- Chapter 16, “Diagnosing Personality and Relationship Problems” (pp. 251–270)
1
CASE OF TIMMY
Intake Date: May 2021
DEMOGRAPHIC DATA:
Timmy is a 23-years-old Caucasian, Protestant male. This is Timmy’s first psychiatric evaluation. Timmy is single and lives at home with his parents. Timmy has had difficulty in jobs and has been taking low paying service jobs for several years.
CHIEF COMPLAINT:
“I was driving out of a strip club and the cops were watching all the customers and nailing who ever they could. I was arrested for a DUI. The cops were against me and the judge sent me here.”
HISTORY OF ILLNESS:
Timmy states he is only here since the cops were watching everyone. He denies any need of treatment but must attend outpatient treatment to satisfy the judge. He believes everyone is in cahoots with each other and this is all a money maker for everyone but him.
SUBSTANCE USE HISTORY:
At 14 Timmy began drinking. His friends would take the alcohol from their parents houses or sometimes break into apartments in his friends’ apartment building and steal alcohol. His chemical use increased when he began using cocaine and amphetamines. His cocaine use started a couple of times a year but he decided he really likes the feeling. He reports trying ecstasy several times over the years as well as marijuana, PCP, LSD, and opiates but does not have a strong liking for any of those. His use of alcohol and pills continued. Timmy reports that he drinks almost daily now but has control over the alcohol. He continues to use cocaine recreationally and amphetamines periodically.
PSYCHOSOCIAL HISTORY:
Timmy had on again/off again friends growing up. He would bully and intimidate his peers from elementary school. He always knew he was better than them anyway. Sometimes he would actually initiate physical fights with his peers.
Timmy has worked since 16 years old but has difficulty keeping jobs. He has worked in the service industry. Although the customers liked him, he was asked to leave many times because of money always missing from the register. He had several jobs for a while but would not stay long at any job. He had several meetings with his supervisors because of many indications of unethical behavior. He hated this since it reminded him of childhood when he had to do whatever he needed to obtain favors from his peers and be able to manipulate them for things they had. Timmy has few friends currently and hangs around mostly with people he uses drugs with.
Timmy denies any legal history until this current arrest. He feels vindicated that the police did not test him for cocaine, only alcohol. He wasn’t intending to use cocaine that evening but it was offered to him and he felt no reason to refuse it. It is not unusual for him to use cocaine if it was being offered for free. Timmy knows his body can handle cocaine since it does not have the same initial effect a small amount used to have.
MEDICAL HISTORY:
Timmy states he is very healthy with no medical problems.
FAMILY ISSUES AND DYNAMICS:
Timmy is the only child from his parents’ union. Timmy reports his growing up to be normal. His mother and father both worked hard, mom being a school teacher and dad being a school principal. He still lives at home but currently fights often with his parents. They want him to settle down and get a full-time job. Money has gone missing and they suspect Timmy took it but are unable to prove it. Timmy believes they work and make good money so they can give him what he needs.
MENTAL STATUS EXAM:
Timmy presents as a neatly dressed male who appears younger than his stated age. His nails are neatly groomed. Facial expressions are appropriate to thought content. Motor activity is appropriate. Thoughts are logical and organized. There is no evidence of hallucinations or delusions. Timmy is oriented to time, place, and person. His intelligence appears normal.
1
DIAGNOSTIC AND STATISTICAL
MANUAL OF
MENTAL DISORDERS
F I F T H E D I T I O N
DSM-5TM
American Psychiatric Association
Officers 2012-2013
P residen t D ilip V. J este, M.D.
P resid en t-Elect J effrey A. Lieberm a n , M.D.
Tr ea su rer Da v id F a ssler, M.D.
Secreta ry R cxser Peele, M.D.
Assembly
Spea k er R. Sc o tt B en so n , M.D.
S peaker-Elect M elin da L. Yo u n g , M.D.
Board o f Trustees
Jeffrey A ka ka, M .D.
C aro l A. B ern stein, M.D.
B rL·̂ ̂C ro w ley, M.D.
An ita S. Everett, M.D.
J effrey G eller, M .D., M .P.H .
M ^ c D a v id G ra ff, M.D.
‘ J ^ e&A. G i^ eneVM.D.
Ju d ith F. Ka sh ta n , M.D.
M o lly K. M c Vo y, M .D.
J a m es E. N in in g er, M.D.
Jo h n M. O ldh a m , M .D.
A lan F. Sc h a tzberg , M.D.
A lik s . W id g e, M .D., P h .D.
E r ik R. V an d erlip, M .D .,
M em ber-in-T raining Tr u stee-E lect
DIAGNOSTIC AND STATISTICAL
MANUAL OF
MENTAL DISORDERS7
F I F T H E D I T I O N
DSM-5TM
New School Library
/«44
Amcriccin
O svch iatric
ADivi«ono(AmCT»MlVhijtiKAMod<tk>n
W ashin g ton , DC
Lon d on , E n gland
Copyright © 2013 American Psychiatric Association
DSM and DSM-5 are trademarks of the American Psychiatric Association. Use of these terms
is prohibited without permission of the American Psychiatric Association.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Unless authorized in writing by the APA, no part of this book may
be reproduced or used in a manner inconsistent with the APA’s copyright. This prohibition
apphes to unauthorized uses or reproductions in any form, including electronic applications.
Correspondence regarding copyright permissions should be directed to DSM Permissions,
American Psychiatric Publishing, 1000 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 1825, Arlington, VA 22209
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Manufactured in the United States of America on acid-free paper.
ISBN 978-0-89042-554-1 (Hardcover)
ISBN 978-0-89042-555-8 (Paperback)
American Psychiatric Association
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www.psych.org
The correct citation for this book is American Psychiatric Association: Diagnostic and Statisti
cal Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition. Arlington, VA, American Psychiatric Associa
tion, 2013.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders : DSM-5. — 5th ed.
p. ; cm.
DSM-5
DSM-V
Includes index.
ISBN 978-0-89042-554-1 (hardcover : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-89042-555-8 (pbk. : alk. paper)
I. American Psychiatric Association. II. American Psychiatric Association. DSM-5 Task Force,
m. Title: DSM-5. IV. Title: DSM-V.
[DNLM: 1. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. 5th ed. 2. Mental Disorders—
classification. 3. Mental Disorders—diagnosis. WM 15]
RC455.2.C4
616.89Ό75—dc23
2013011061
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data ^ n
A CIP record is available from the British Library. ^
Text Design—Tammy J. Cordova
Manufacturing—Edwards Brothers Malloy ^
cH
Contents
DSM-5 Classification…………………………………………………………xiii
Preface…………………………………………………………………………….. xli
Section I
DSM-5 Basics
Introduction……………………………………………………………………….. 5
Use of the M anual………………………………………………………………19
Cautionary Statement for Forensic Use of DSM-5………………… 25
Section II
Diagnostic Criteria and Codes
Neurodevelopmental Disorders………………………………………….. 31
Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders……….87
Bipolar and Related Disorders………………………………………….. 123
Depressive Disorders………………………………………………………. 155
Anxiety Disorders………………………………………………………………189
Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders………………….. 235
Trauma- and Stressor-Related Disorders…………………………… 265
Dissociative Disorders…………………………………………………….. 291
Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders…………………………. 309
Feeding and Eating Disorders………………………………………….. 329
Elimination Disorders………………………………………………………. 355
Sleep-Wake Disorders………………………………………………………. 361
Sexual Dysfunctions…………………………………………………………423
Gender Dysphoria…………………………………………………………….451
Disruptive, Impulse-Control, and Conduct Disorders…………..461
Substance-Related and Addictive Disorders……………………… 481
Neurocognitive Disorders…………………………………………………. 591
Personality Disorders………………………………………………………. 645
Paraphilic Disorders………………………………………………………… 685
Other Mental Disorders…………………………………………………… 707
Medication-Induced Movement Disorders
and Other Adverse Effects of M edication……………………….. 709
Other Conditions That May Be a Focus of Clinical Attention .. 715
Section III
Emerging Measures and Models
Assessment Measures…………………………………………………….. 733
Cultural Formulation………………………………………………………… 749
Alternative DSM-5 Model for Personality Disorders…………….761
Conditions for Further Study……………………………………………. 783
Appendix
Highlights of Changes From DSM-IV to DSM -5………………….. 809
Glossary of Technical Term s……………………………………………. 817
Glossary of Cultural Concepts of Distress…………………………. 833
Alphabetical Listing of DSM-5 Diagnoses and Codes
(ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM)……………………………………………. 839
Numerical Listing of DSM-5 Diagnoses and Codes
(ICD-9-CM)………………………………………………………………….. 863
Numerical Listing of DSM-5 Diagnoses and Codes
(ICD-10-CM)………………………………………………………………….877
DSM-5 Advisors and Other Contributors…………………………… 897
Index………………………………………………………………………………. 917
DSM-5 Task Force
D a vid J. K u pfer, M.D.
Task Force Chair
D a rrel A. R egier, M .D., M .P.H .
Task Force Vice-Chair
William E. Narrow, M.D.,
Research Director
Dan G. Blazer, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H.
Jack D. Burke Jr., M.D., M.P.H.
William T. Carpenter Jr., M.D.
F. Xavier Castellanos, M.D.
Wilson M. Compton, M.D., M.P.E.
Joel E. Dimsdale, M.D.
Javier I. Escobar, M.D., M.Sc.
Jan A. Fawcett, M.D.
Bridget F. Grant, Ph.D., Ph.D. (2009-)
Steven E. Hyman, M.D. (2007-2012)
Dilip V. Jeste, M.D. (2007-2011)
Helena C. Kraemer, Ph.D.
Daniel T. Mamah, M.D., M.P.E.
James P. McNulty, A.B., Sc.B.
Howard B. Moss, M.D. (2007-2009)
Susan K. Schultz, M.D., Text Editor
Emily A. Kuhl, Ph.D., APA Text Editor
Charles P. O’Brien, M.D., Ph.D.
Roger Peele, M.D.
Katharine A. Phillips, M.D.
Daniel S. Pine, M.D.
Charles F. Reynolds III, M.D.
Maritza Rubio-Stipec, Sc.D.
David Shaffer, M.D.
Andrew E. Skodol II, M.D.
Susan E. Swedo, M.D.
B. Timothy Walsh, M.D.
Philip Wang, M.D., Dr.P.H. (2007-2012)
William M. Womack, M.D.
Kimberly A. Yonkers, M.D.
Kenneth J. Zucker, Ph.D.
Norman Sartorius, M.D., Ph.D., Consultant
APA Division of Research Staff on DSIVI-5
Darrel A. Regier, M.D., M.P.H.,
Director, Division o f Research
William E. Narrow, M.D., M.P.H.,
Associate Director
Emily A. Kuhl, Ph.D., Senior Science
Writer; Staff Text Editor
Diana E. Clarke, Ph.D., M.Sc., Research
Statistician
Lisa H. Greiner, M.S.S.A., DSM-5 Field
Trials Project Manager
Eve K. Moscicki, Sc.D., M.P.H.,
Director, Practice Research Network
S. Janet Kuramoto, Ph.D. M.H.S.,
Senior Scientific Research Associate,
Practice Research Network
Amy Porfiri, M.B.A.
Director o f Finance and Administration
Jennifer J. Shupinka, Assistant Director,
DSM Operations
Seung-Hee Hong, DSM Senior Research
Associate
Anne R. Hiller, DSM Research Associate
Alison S. Beale, DSM Research Associate
Spencer R. Case, DSM Research Associate
Joyce C. West, Ph.D., M.P.P.,
Health Policy Research Director, Practice
Research Network
Farifteh F. Duffy, Ph.D.,
Quality Care Research Director, Practice
Research Network
Lisa M. Countis, Field Operations
Manager, Practice Research Network
Christopher M. Reynolds,
Executive Assistant
APA Office of the IVIedlcal Director
Jam es H. S c u l l y Jr ., M.D.
Medical Director and CEO
Editorial and Coding Consultants
Michael B. First, M.D. Maria N. Ward, M.Ed., RHIT, CCS-P
DSM-5 Work Groups
ADHD and Disruptive Behavior Disorders
D a v id Sha ffer, M.D.
Chair
F. Xa v ier C a stella n o s, M.D.
Co-Chair
Paul J. Frick, Ph.D., Text Coordinator Luis Augusto Rohde, M.D., Sc.D.
Glorisa Canino, Ph.D. Rosemary Tannock, Ph.D.
Terrie E. Moffitt, Ph.D. Eric A. Taylor, M.B.
Joel T. Nigg, Ph.D. Richard Todd, Ph.D., M.D. (d. 2008)
Anxiety, Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum, Posttraumatic,
and Dissociative Disorders
K a th a rin e A. Ph illips, M.D.
Chair
Michelle G. Craske, Ph.D., Text Scott L. Rauch, M.D.
Coordinator H. Blair Simpson, M.D., Ph.D.
J. Gavin Andrews, M.D. David Spiegel, M.D.
Susan M. Bögels, Ph.D. Dan J. Stein, M.D., Ph.D.
Matthew J. Friedman, M.D., Ph.D. Murray B. Stein, M.D.
Eric Hollander, M.D. (2007-2009) Robert J. Ursano, M.D.
Roberto Lewis-Fernandez, M.D., M.T.S. Hans-Ulrich Wittchen, Ph.D.
Robert S. Pynoos, M.D., M.P.H.
Childhood and Adolescent Disorders
D an iel S. Pin e, M.D.
Chair
Ronald E. Dahl, M.D. James F. Leckman, M.D.
E. Jane Costello, Ph.D. (2007-2009) Ellen Leibenluft, M.D.
Regina Smith James, M.D. Judith H. L. Rapoport, M.D.
Rachel G. Klein, Ph.D. Charles H. Zeanah, M.D.
Eating Disorders
B. T im o th y W alsh, M.D.
Chair
Stephen A. Wonderlich, Ph.D., Richard E. Kreipe, M.D.
Text Coordinator Marsha D. Marcus, Ph.D.
Evelyn Attia, M.D. James E. Mitchell, M.D.
Anne E. Becker, M.D., Ph.D., Sc.M. Ruth H. Striegel-Moore, Ph.D.
Rachel Bryant-Waugh, M.D. G. Terence Wilson, Ph.D.
Hans W. Hoek, M.D., Ph.D. Barbara E. Wolfe, Ph.D. A.P.R.N.
Mood Disorders
J a n a . F a w c e t t , M.D.
Chair
Ellen Frank, Ph.D., Text Coordinator
Jules Angst, M.D. (2007-2008)
William H. Coryell, M.D.
Lori L. Davis, M.D.
Raymond J. DePaulo, M.D.
Sir David Goldberg, M.D.
James S. Jackson, Ph.D.
Kenneth S. Kendler, M.D., Ph.D.
(2007-2010)
Mario Maj, M.D., Ph.D.
Husseini K. Manji, M.D. (2007-2008)
Michael R. Phillips, M.D.
Trisha Suppes, M.D., Ph.D.
Carlos A. Zarate, M.D.
Neurocognitive Disorders
D ilip V. Je s te , M .D. (2007-2011)
Chair Emeritus
D an G. Bla zer, M .D., P h .D., M.P.H.
Chair
R o n a l d C. P e te r s e n , M .D., Ph.D.
Co-Chair
Mary Ganguli, M.D., M.P.H.,
Text Coordinator
Deborah Blacker, M.D., Sc.D.
Warachal Faison, M.D. (2007-2008)
Igor Grant, M.D.
Eric J. Lenze, M.D.
Jane S. Paulsen, Ph.D.
Perminder S. Sachdev, M.D., Ph.D.
Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Su sa n E. Sw ed o , M.D.
Chair
Gillian Baird, M.A., M.B., B.Chir.,
Text Coordinator
Edwin H. Cook Jr., M.D.
Francesca G. Happé, Ph.D.
James C. Harris, M.D.
Walter E. Kaufmann, M.D.
Bryan H. King, M.D.
Catherine E. Lord, Ph.D.
Joseph Piven, M.D.
Sally J. Rogers, Ph.D.
Sarah J. Spence, M.D., Ph.D.
Fred Volkmar, M.D. (2007-2009)
Amy M. Wetherby, Ph.D.
Harry H. Wright, M.D.
Personality and Personality Disorders^
A n d rew E. Sk o d o l, M.D.
Chair
Joh n M. O l d h a m , M.D.
Co-Chair
Robert F. Krueger, Ph.D., Text
Coordinator
Renato D. Alarcon, M.D., M.P.H.
Carl C. Bell, M.D.
Donna S. Bender, Ph.D.
Lee Anna Clark, Ph.D.
W. John Livesley, M.D., Ph.D. (2007-2012)
Leslie C. Morey, Ph.D.
Larry J. Siever, M.D.
Roel Verheul, Ph.D. (2008-2012)
̂The members of the Personality and Personality Disorders Work Group are responsible for the
alternative DSM-5 model for personality disorders that is included in Section III. The Section II
personality disorders criteria and text (with updating of the text) are retained from DSM-IV-TR.
Psychotic Disorders
W illiam T. C arpen ter J r ., M.D.
Chair
Deanna M. Barch, Ph.D., Text Dolores Malaspina, M.D., M.S.P.H.
Coordinator Michael J. Owen, M.D., Ph.D.
Juan R. Bustillo, M.D. Susan K. Schultz, M.D.
Wolfgang Gaebel, M.D. Rajiv Tandon, M.D.
Raquel E. Gur, M.D., Ph.D. Ming T. Tsuang, M.D., Ph.D.
Stephan H. Heckers, M.D. Jim van Os, M.D.
Sexual and Gender Identity Disorders
K en n eth J. Zu c k er, Ph .D.
Chair
Lori Brotto, Ph.D., Text Coordinator Martin P. Kafka, M.D.
Irving M. Binik, Ph.D. Richard B. Krueger, M.D.
Ray M. Blanchard, Ph.D. Niklas Langström, M.D., Ph.D.
Peggy T. Cohen-Kettenis, Ph.D. Heino F.L. Meyer-Bahlburg, Dr. rer. nat.
Jack Drescher, M.D. Friedemann Pfäfflin, M.D.
Cynthia A. Graham, Ph.D. Robert Taylor Segraves, M.D., Ph.D.
Sleep-Wake Disorders
C h a rles F. Reyn o ld s III, M.D.
Chair
Ruth M. O’Hara, Ph.D., Text Coordinator Kathy P. Parker, Ph.D., R.N.
Charles M. Morin, Ph.D. Susan Redline, M.D., M.P.H.
Allan I. Pack, Ph.D. Dieter Riemann, Ph.D.
Somatic Symptom Disorders
J o el E. D im sd a le, M.D.
Chair
James L. Levenson, M.D., Text Michael R. Irwin, M.D.
Coordinator Francis J. Keefe, Ph.D. (2007-2011)
Arthur J. Barsky III, M.D. Sing Lee, M.D.
Francis Creed, M.D. Michael Sharpe, M.D.
Nancy Frasure-Smith, Ph.D. (2007-2011) Lawson R. Wulsin, M.D.
Substance-Related Disorders
C h a rles P. O ‘B rien, M .D., Ph .D.
Chair
Th o m a s J. C ro w ley, M.D.
Co-Chair
Wilson M. Compton, M.D., M.P.E., Thomas R. Kosten, M.D. (2007-2008)
Text Coordinator Walter Ling, M.D.
Marc Auriacombe, M.D. Spero M. Manson, Ph.D. (2007-2008)
Guilherme L. G. Borges, M.D., Dr .Sc. A. Thomas McLellan, Ph.D. (2007-2008)
Kathleen K. Bucholz, Ph.D. Nancy M. Petry, Ph.D.
Alan J. Budney, Ph.D. Marc A. Schuckit, M.D.
Bridget F. Grant, Ph.D., Ph.D. Wim van den Brink, M.D., Ph.D.
Deborah S. Hasin, Ph.D. (2007-2008)
DSM-5 Study Groups
Diagnostic Spectra and DSM/ICD Harmonization
Steven E. H ym a n , M.D.
Chair (2007-2012)
William T. Carpenter Jr., M.D. William E. Narrow, M.D., M.P.H.
Wilson M. Compton, M.D., M.P.E. Charles P. O’Brien, M.D., Ph.D.
Jan A. Fawcett, M.D. John M. Oldham, M.D.
Helena C. Kraemer, Ph.D. Katharine A. Phillips, M.D.
David J. Kupfer, M.D. Darrel A. Regier, M.D., M.P.H.
Lifespan Developmental Approaches
E ric J. L en ze, M.D.
Chair
Susa n K. Sc h u ltz, M.D.
Chair Emeritus
Dan iel S. P in e, M.D.
Chair Emeritus
Dan G. Blazer, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H.
F. Xavier Castellanos, M.D.
Wilson M. Compton, M.D., M.P.E.
Daniel T. Mamah, M.D., M.P.E.
Andrew E. Skodol II, M.D.
Susan E. Swedo, M.D.
Gender and Cross-Cultural Issues
K im berly A. Yo n kers, M.D.
Chair
R oberto L ew is-Fern â n d ez, M .D., M .T.S.
Co-Chair, Cross-Cultural Issues
Renato D. Alarcon, M.D., M.P.H.
Diana E. Clarke, Ph.D., M.Sc.
Javier I. Escobar, M.D., M.Sc.
Ellen Frank, Ph.D.
James S. Jackson, Ph.D.
Spiro M. Manson, Ph.D. (2007-2008)
James P. McNulty, A.B., Sc.B.
Leslie C. Morey, Ph.D.
William E. Narrow, M.D., M.P.H.
Roger Peele, M.D.
Philip Wang, M.D., Dr.P.H. (2007-2012)
William M. Womack, M.D.
Kermeth J. Zucker, Ph.D.
Psychiatric/General Medical Interface
L a w so n R. W u lsin, M.D.
Chair
Ronald E. Dahl, M.D.
Joel E. Dimsdale, M.D.
Javier I. Escobar, M.D., M.Sc.
Dilip V. Jeste, M.D. (2007-2011)
Walter E. Kaufmann, M.D.
Richard E. Kreipe, M.D.
Ronald C. Petersen, Ph.D., M.D.
Charles F. Reynolds III, M.D.
Robert Taylor Segraves, M.D., Ph.D.
B. Timothy Walsh, M.D.
Impairment and Disability
J a n e S. P a u ls e n , Ph.D .
Chair
J. Gavin Andrews, M.D.
Glorisa Canino, Ph.D.
Lee Anna Clark, Ph.D.
Diana E. Clarke, Ph.D., M.Sc.
Michelle G. Craske, Ph.D.
Hans W. Hoek, M.D., Ph.D.
Helena C. Kraemer, Ph.D.
William E. Narrow, M.D., M.P.H.
David Shaffer, M.D.
Diagnostic Assessment Instruments
J a ck D. Burk e Jr ., M .D., M .P.H.
Chair
Lee Anna Clark, Ph.D.
Diana E. Clarke, Ph.D., M.Sc.
Bridget F. Grant, Ph.D., Ph.D.
Helena C. Kraemer, Ph.D.
William E. Narrow, M.D., M.P.H.
David Shaffer, M.D.
DSM-5 Research Group
W illiam E. N a rro w , M .D., M.P.H.
Chair
Jack D. Burke Jr., M.D., M.P.H.
Diana E. Clarke, Ph.D., M.Sc.
Helena C. Kraemer, Ph.D.
David J. Kupfer, M.D.
Darrel A. Regier, M.D., M.P.H.
David Shaffer, M.D.
Course Specifiers and Glossary
W o lfg a n g G a ebel, M.D.
Chair
Ellen Frank, Ph.D.
Charles P. O’Brien, M.D., Ph.D.
Norman Sartorius, M.D., Ph.D.,
Consultant
Susan K. Schultz, M.D.
Dan J. Stein, M.D., Ph.D.
Eric A. Taylor, M.B.
David J. Kupfer, M.D.
Darrel A. Regier, M.D., M.P.H.
Before each disorder name, ICD-9-CM codes are provided, followed by ICD-IO-CM codes
in parentheses. Blank lines indicate that either the ICD-9-CM or the ICD-IO-CM code is not
applicable. For some disorders, the code can be indicated only according to the subtype or
specifier.
ICD-9-CM codes are to be used for coding purposes in the United States through Sep
tember 30,2014. ICD-IO-CM codes are to be used starting October 1,2014.
Following chapter titles and disorder names, page numbers for the corresponding text
or criteria are included in parentheses.
Note for all mental disorders due to another medical condition: Indicate the name of
the other medical condition in the name of the mental disorder due to [the medical condi
tion]. The code and name for the other medical condition should be listed first immedi
ately before the mental disorder due to the medical condition.
Neurodevelopm ental Disorders (31)
Intellectual Disabilities (33)
319 (___.__) Intellectual Disability (Intellectual Developmental Disorder) (33)
Specify current severity;
(F70) Mild
(F71) Moderate
(F72) Severe
(F73) Profound
315.8 (F88) Global Developmental Delay (41)
319 (F79) Unspecified Intellectual Disability (Intellectual Developmental
Disorder) (41)
Communication Disorders (41)
315.39 (F80.9) Language Disorder (42)
315.39 (F80.0) Speech Sound Disorder (44)
315.35 (F80.81) Childhood-Onset Fluency Disorder (Stuttering) (45)
Note: Later-onset cases are diagnosed as 307.0 (F98.5) adult-onset fluency
disorder.
315.39 (F80.89) Social (Pragmatic) Communication Disorder (47)
307.9 (F80.9) Unspecified Communication Disorder (49)
Autism Spectrum Disorder (50)
299.00 (F84.0) Autism Spectrum Disorder (50)
Specify if: Associated with a known medical or genetic condition or envi
ronmental factor; Associated with another neurodevelopmental, men
tal, or behavioral disorder
Specify current severity for Criterion A and Criterion B: Requiring very
substantial support. Requiring substantial support. Requiring support
Specify if: With or without accompanying intellectual impairment. With
or without accompanying language impairment. With catatonia (use
additional code 293.89 [F06.1])
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (59)
___.__ (__ .__) Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (59)
Specify whether:
314.01 (F90.2) Combined presentation
314.00 (F90.0) Predominantly inattentive presentation
314.01 (F90.1) Predominantly hyperactive/impulsive presentation
Specify if: In partial remission
Specify current severity: Mild, Moderate, Severe
314.01 (F90.8) Other Specified Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (65)
314.01 (F90.9) Unspecified Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (66)
Specific Learning Disorder (66)
___.__ (___.__) Specific Learning Disorder (66)
Specify if:
315.00 (F81.0) With impairment in reading {specify if with word reading
accuracy, reading rate or fluency, reading comprehension)
315.2 (F81.81 ) With impairment in written expression {specify if with spelling
accuracy, grammar and punctuation accuracy, clarity or
organization of written expression)
315.1 (F81.2) With impairment in mathematics {specify if with number sense,
memorization of arithmetic facts, accurate or fluent
calculation, accurate math reasoning)
Specify current severity: Mild, Moderate, Severe
Motor Disorders (74)
315.4 (F82) Developmental Coordination Disorder (74)
307.3 (F98.4) Stereotypic Movement Disorder (77)
Specify if: With self-injurious behavior. Without self-injurious behavior
Specify if: Associated with a known medical or genetic condition, neuro
developmental disorder, or environmental factor
Specify current severity: Mild, Moderate, Severe
Tic Disorders
307.23 (F95.2) Tourette’s Disorder (81)
307.22 (F95.1) Persistent (Chronic) Motor or Vocal Tic Disorder (81)
Specify if: With motor tics only. With vocal tics only
307.21 (F95.0) Provisional Tic Disorder (81)
307.20 (F95.8), Other Specified Tic Disorder (85)
307.20 (F95.9) Urispecified Tic Disorder (85)
Other Neurodevelopmental Disorders (86)
315.8 (FSB) Other Specified Neurodevelopmental Disorder (86)
315.9 (F89) Unspecified Neurodevelopmental Disorder (86)
Schizophrenia Spectrum
and Other Psychotic Disorders (87)
The following specifiers apply to Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders
where indicated:
^Specify if: The following course specifiers are only to be used after a 1-year duration of the dis
order: First episode, currently in acute episode; First episode, currently in partial remission;
First episode, currently in full remission; Multiple episodes, currently in acute episode; Mul
tiple episodes, currently in partial remission; Multiple episodes, currently in full remission;
Continuous; Unspecified
^Specify if: With catatonia (use additional code 293.89 [F06.1])
^Specify current severity of delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, abnormal psycho
motor behavior, negative symptoms, impaired cognition, depression, and mania symptoms
301.22 (F21)
297.1 (F22)
298.8 (F23)
295.40 (F20.81)
295.90 (F20.9)
295.70 (F25.0)
295.70 (F25.1)
293.81 (F06.2)
293.82 (F06.0)
Schizotypal (Personality) Disorder (90)
Delusional Disorder^’ ̂ (90)
Specify whether: Erotomanie type. Grandiose type. Jealous type. Persecu
tory type. Somatic type. Mixed type. Unspecified type
Specify if: With bizarre content
Brief Psychotic Disorder^’ ̂ (94)
Specify if: With marked stressor(s). Without marked stressor(s). With
postpartum onset
Schizophreniform Disorder^’ ̂ (96)
Specify if: With good prognostic features. Without good prognostic fea
tures
Schizophrenia^’ ̂ (99)
Schizoaffective Disorder^’ ̂ (105)
Specify whether:
Bipolar type
Depressive type
Substance/Medication-Induced Psychotic Disorder^ (110)
Note: See the criteria set and corresponding recording procedures for
substance-specific codes and ICD-9-CM and ICD-IO-CM coding.
Specify if: With onset during intoxication. With onset during withdrawal
Psychotic Disorder Due to Another Medical Condition^ (115)
Specify whether:
With delusions
With hallucinations
293.89 (F06.1) Catatonia Associated With Another Mental Disorder (Catatonia
Specifier) (119)
293.89 (F06.1) Catatonic Disorder Due to Another Medical Condition (120)
293.89 (F06.1) Unspecified Catatonia (121)
Note: Code first 781.99 (R29.818) other symptoms involving nervous and
musculoskeletal systems.
298.8 (F28) Other Specified Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic
Disorder (122)
298.9 (F29) Unspecified Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic
Disorder (122)
Bipolar and Related Disorders (123)
The following specifiers apply to Bipolar and Related Disorders where indicated:
Ŝpecify: With anxious distress (specify current severity: mild, moderate, moderate-severe, severe);
With mixed features; With rapid cycling; With melancholic features; With atypical features;
With mood-congruent psychotic features; With mood-incongruent psychotic features; With
catatonia (use additional code 293.89 [F06.1]); With péripartum onset; With seasonal pattem
296.41
296.42
296.43
296.44
296.45
296.46
296.40
296.40
296.45
296.46
296.40
296.51
296.52
296.53
296.54
296.55
296.56
296.50
296.7
(F31.11)
(F31.12)
(F31.13)
(F31.2)
(F31.73)
(F31.74)
(F31.9)
(F31.0)
(F31.73)
(F31.74)
(F31.9)
(F31.31)
(F31.32)
(F31.4)
(F31.5)
(F31.75)
(F31.76)
(F31.9)
(F31.9)
296.89 (F31.81)
Bipolar I Disorder® (123)
Current or most recent episode manic
Mild
Moderate
Severe
With psychotic features
In partial remission
In full remission
Unspecified
Current or most recent episode hypomanie
In partial remission
In kill remission
Unspecified
Current or most recent episode depressed
Mild
Moderate
Severe
With psychotic features
In partial remission
In full remission
Unspecified
Current or most recent episode unspecified
Bipolar II Disorder® (132)
Specify current or most recent episode: Hypomanie, Depressed
Specify course if full criteria for a mood episode are not currently met: In
partial remission. In full remission
Specify severity if full criteria for a mood episode are not currently met:
Mild, Moderate, Severe
301.13 (F34.0)
y
293.83 (__ ._ )
(F06.33)
(F06.33)
(F06.34)
296.89 (F31.89)
296.80 (F31.9)
Cyclothymic Disorder (139)
Specify if: With anxious distress
Substance/Medication-Induced Bipolar and Related Disorder (142)
Note: See the criteria set and corresponding recording procedures for
substance-specific codes and ICD-9-CM and ICD-IO-CM coding.
Specify if: With onset during intoxication. With onset during withdrawal
Bipolar and Related Disorder Due to Another Medical Condition
(145)
Specify if:
With manic features
With manic- or hypomanic-like episode
With mixed features
Other Specified Bipolar and Related Disorder (148)
Unspecified Bipolar and Related Disorder (149)
Depressive Disorders (155)
The following specifiers apply to Depressive Disorders where indicated:
^Specify: With anxious distress (specify current severity: mild, moderate, moderate-severe,
severe); With mixed features; With melancholic features; With atypical features; With mood-
congruent psychotic features; With mood-incongruent psychotic features; With catatonia
(use additional code 293.89 [F06.1]); With péripartum onset; With seasonal pattern
296.99 (F34.8) Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder (156)
. ( _ ■ ) Major Depressive Disorder® (160)
. ( _ . ) Single episode
296.21 (F32.0) Mild
296.22 (F32.1) Moderate
296.23 (F32.2) Severe
296.24 (F32.3) With psychotic features
296.25 (F32.4) In partial remission
296.26 (F32.5) In full remission
296.20 (F32.9) Unspecified
. ( _ · ) Recurrent episode
296.31 (F33.0) Mild
296.32 (F33.1) Moderate
296.33 (F33.2) Severe
296.34 (F33.3) With psychotic features
296.35 (F33.41) In partial remission
296.36 (F33.42) In full remission
296.30 (F33.9) Unspecified
300.4 (F34.1) Persistent Depressive Disorder (Dysthymia)® (168)
Specify if: In partial remission. In full remission
Specify if: Early onset. Late onset
Specify if: With pure dysthymic syndrome; With persistent major depres
sive episode; With intermittent major depressive episodes, with current
625.4 (N94.3)
(_ _ ■ _ )
293.83 (__ ._ )
(F06.31)
(F06.32)
(F06.34)
311 (F32.8)
311 (F32.9)
episode; With intermittent major depressive episodes, without current
episode
Specify current severity: Mild, Moderate, Severe
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (171)
Substance/Medication-Induced Depressive Disorder (175)
Note: See the criteria set and corresponding recording procedures for
substance-specific codes and ICD-9-CM and ICD-IO-CM coding.
Specify if: With onset during intoxication. With onset during withdrawal
Depressive Disorder Due to Another Medical Condition (180)
Specify if:
With depressive features
With major depressive-like episode
With mixed features
Other Specified Depressive Disorder (183)
Unspecified Depressive Disorder (184)
Anxiety Disorders (189)
309.21 (F93.0)
312.23 (F94.0)
300.29 (__ ._ )
(F40.218)
(F40.228)
( _ · _ )
(F40.230)
(F40.231)
(F40.232)
(F40.233)
(F40.248)
(F40.298)
300.23 (F40.10)
300.01 (F41.0)
300.22 (F40.00)
300.02 (F41.1)
Separation Anxiety Disorder (190)
Selective Mutism (195)
Specific Phobia (197)
Specify if:
Animal
Natural environment
Blood-injection-injury
Fear of blood
Fear of injections and transfusions
Fear of other medical care
Fear of injury
Situational
Other
Social Anxiety Disorder (Social Phobia) (202)
Specify if: Performance only
Panic Disorder (208)
Panic Attack Specifier (214)
Agoraphobia (217)
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (222)
Substance/Medication-Induced Anxiety Disorder (226)
Note: See the criteria set and corresponding recording procedures for
substance-specific codes and ICD-9-CM and ICD-IO-CM coding.
Specify if: With onset during intoxication. With onset during withdrawal.
With onset after medication use
293.84 (F06.4) Anxiety Disorder Due to Another Medical Condition (230)
300.09 (F41.8) Other Specified Anxiety Disorder (233)
300.00 (F41.9) Unspecified Anxiety Disorder (233)
Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders (235)
The following specifier applies to Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders where indicated:
^Specify if: With good or fair insight. With poor insight. With absent insight/delusional beliefs
300.3 (F42)
300.7 (F45.22)
300.3 (F42)
312.39 (F63.2)
698.4 (L98.1)
(_._J
294.8 (F06.8)
300.3 (F42)
300.3 (F42)
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder^ (237)
Specify if: Tic-related
Body Dysmorphic Disorder^ (242)
Specify if: With muscle dysmorphia
Hoarding Disorder^ (247)
Specify if: With excessive acquisition
Trichotillomania (Hair-Pulling …
Also from James Morrison
Diagnosis Made Easier:
Principles and Techniques for Mental Health Clinicians, Second Edition
The First Interview, Fourth Edition
When Psychological Problems Mask Medical Disorders:
A Guide for Psychotherapists
For more information, see www.guilford.com/morrison
2
DSM-5® Made Easy
The Clinician’s Guide to Diagnosis
James Morrison
THE GUILFORD PRESS
New York London
3
Epub Edition ISBN: 9781462515448; Kindle Edition ISBN: 9781462515455
© 2014 The Guilford Press
A Division of Guilford Publications, Inc.
72 Spring Street, New York, NY 10012
www.guilford.com
All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form
or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording, or otherwise, without
written permission from the publisher.
Last digit is print number: 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
The author has checked with sources believed to be reliable in his effort to provide information that is
complete and generally in accord with the standards of practice that are accepted at the time of publication.
However, in view of the possibility of human error or changes in behavioral, mental health, or medical
sciences, neither the author, nor the editor and publisher, nor any other party who has been involved in the
preparation or publication of this work warrants that the information contained herein is in every respect
accurate or complete, and they are not responsible for any errors or omissions or the results obtained from
the use of such information. Readers are encouraged to confirm the information contained in this book with
other sources.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Morrison, James R., author.
DSM-5 made easy : the clinician’s guide to diagnosis / James Morrison.
p.; cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-4625-1442-7 (hardcover : alk. paper)
I. Title.
[DNLM: 1. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. 5th ed 2. Mental Disorders—
diagnosis—Case Reports. 3. Mental Disorders—classification—Case Reports. WM 141]
RC469
616.89’075—dc23
2014001109
DSM-5 is a registered trademark of the American Psychiatric Association. The APA has not participated in
the preparation of this book.
4
For Mary, still my sine qua non
5
About the Author
James Morrison, MD, is Affiliate Professor of Psychiatry at Oregon Health and
Science University in Portland. He has extensive experience in both the private
and public sectors. With his acclaimed practical books—including, most recently,
Diagnosis Made Easier, Second Edition, and The First Interview, Fourth Edition—
Dr. Morrison has guided hundreds of thousands of mental health professionals
and students through the complexities of clinical evaluation and diagnosis. His
website (www.guilford.com/jm) offers additional discussion and resources related
to psychiatric diagnosis and DSM-5.
6
Acknowledgments
Many people helped in the creation of this book. I want especially to thank my
wife, Mary, who has provided unfailingly excellent advice and continual support.
Chris Fesler was unsparing with his assistance in organizing my web page.
Others who read portions of the earlier version of this book, DSM-IV Made
Easy, in one stage or another included Richard Maddock, MD, Nicholas
Rosenlicht, MD, James Picano, PhD, K. H. Blacker, MD, and Irwin Feinberg,
MD. I am grateful to Molly Mullikin, the perfect secretary, who contributed
hours of transcription and years of intelligent service in creating the earlier
version of this book. I am also profoundly indebted to the anonymous reviewers
who provided input; you know who you are, even if I don’t.
My editor, Kitty Moore, a keen and wonderful critic, helped develop the
concept originally, and has been a mainstay of the enterprise for this new edition.
I also deeply appreciate the many other editors and production people at The
Guilford Press, notably Editorial Project Manager Anna Brackett, who helped
shape and speed this book into print. I would single out Marie Sprayberry, who
went the last mile with her thoughtful, meticulous copyediting. David Mitchell
did yeoman service in reading the manuscript from cover to cover to root out
errors. I am indebted to Ashley Ortiz for her intelligent criticism of my web page,
and to Kyala Shea, who helped get it web borne.
A number of clinicians and other professionals provided their helpful advice in
the final revision process. They include Alison Beale, Ray Blanchard, PhD, Dan
G. Blazer, MD, PhD, William T. Carpenter, MD, Thomas J. Crowley, MD,
Darlene Elmore, Jan Fawcett, MD, Mary Ganguli, MD, Bob Krueger, PhD,
Kristian E. Markon, PhD, William Narrow, MD, Peter Papallo, MSW, MS,
Charles F. Reynolds, MD, Aidan Wright, PhD, and Kenneth J. Zucker, PhD. To
each of these, and to the countless patients who have provided the clinical
material for this book, I am profoundly grateful.
7
Contents
Also from James Morrison
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication Page
About the Author
Acknowledgments
FREQUENTLY NEEDED TABLES
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 1 Neurodevelopmental Disorders
CHAPTER 2 Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders
CHAPTER 3 Mood Disorders
CHAPTER 4 Anxiety Disorders
CHAPTER 5 Obsessive–Compulsive and Related Disorders
CHAPTER 6 Trauma- and Stressor-Related Disorders
CHAPTER 7 Dissociative Disorders
CHAPTER 8 Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders
CHAPTER 9 Feeding and Eating Disorders
CHAPTER 10 Elimination Disorders
CHAPTER 11 Sleep–Wake Disorders
CHAPTER 12 Sexual Dysfunctions
CHAPTER 13 Gender Dysphoria
CHAPTER 14 Disruptive, Impulse-Control, and Conduct Disorders
CHAPTER 15 Substance-Related and Addictive Disorders
8
CHAPTER 16 Cognitive Disorders
CHAPTER 17 Personality Disorders
CHAPTER 18 Paraphilic Disorders
CHAPTER 19 Other Factors That May Need Clinical Attention
CHAPTER 20 Patients and Diagnoses
APPENDIX
Essential Tables
Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) Scale
Physical Disorders That Affect Mental Diagnosis
Classes (or Names) of Medications That Can Cause Mental Disorders
INDEX
About Guilford Press
Discover Related Guilford Books
9
Frequently Needed Tables
TABLE 3.2 Coding for Bipolar I and Major Depressive Disorders
TABLE 3.3 Descriptors and Specifiers That Can Apply to Mood Disorders
TABLE 15.1 Symptoms of Substance Intoxication and Withdrawal
TABLE 15.2
ICD-10-CM Code Numbers for Substance Intoxication, Substance
Withdrawal, Substance Use Disorder, and Substance-Induced Mental
Disorders
TABLE 16.1 Coding for Major and Mild NCDs
Purchasers of this ebook can download copies of these tables from
www.guilford.com/morrison2-forms.
10
Introduction
The summer after my first year in medical school, I visited a friend at his home
near the mental institution where both of his parents worked. One afternoon,
walking around the vast, open campus, we fell into conversation with a staff
psychiatrist, who told us about his latest interesting patient.
She was a young woman who had been admitted a few days earlier. While
attending college nearby, she had suddenly become agitated—speaking rapidly
and rushing in a frenzy from one activity to another. After she impulsively sold
her nearly new Corvette for $500, her friends had brought her for evaluation.
“Five hundred dollars!” exclaimed the psychiatrist. “That kind of thinking,
that’s schizophrenia!”
Now my friend and I had had just enough training in psychiatry to recognize
that this young woman’s symptoms and course of illness were far more consistent
with an episode of mania than with schizophrenia. We were too young and
callow to challenge the diagnosis of the experienced clinician, but as we went on
our way, we each expressed the fervent hope that this patient’s care would be less
flawed than her assessment.
For decades, the memory of that blown diagnosis has haunted me, in part
because it is by no means unique in the annals of mental health lore. Indeed, it
wasn’t until many years later that the first diagnostic manual to include specific
criteria (DSM-III) was published. That book has since morphed into the
enormous fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders (DSM-5), published by the American Psychiatric Association.
Everyone who evaluates and treats mental health patients must understand
the latest edition of what has become the world standard for evaluation and
diagnosis. But getting value from DSM-5 requires a great deal of concentration.
Written by a committee with the goal of providing standards for research as well
as clinical practice in a variety of disciplines, it covers nearly every conceivable
subject related to mental health. But you could come away from it not knowing
how the diagnostic criteria translate to a real live patient.
I wrote DSM-5 Made Easy to make mental health diagnosis more accessible to
clinicians from all mental health professions. In these pages, you will find
descriptions of every mental disorder, with emphasis on those that occur in
adults. With it, you can learn how to diagnose each one of them. With its careful
11
use, no one today would mistake that young college student’s manic symptoms
for schizophrenia.
WHAT HAVE I DONE TO MAKE DSM-5 EASY?
Quick Guides. Opening each chapter is a summary of the diagnoses addressed
therein—and other disorders that might afflict patients who complain about
similar problems. It also provides a useful index to the material in that chapter.
Introductory material. The section on each disorder starts out with a brief
description designed to orient you to the diagnosis. It includes a discussion of the
major symptoms, perhaps a little historical information, and some of the
demographics—who is likely to have this disorder, and in what circumstances.
Here, I’ve tried to state that which I would want to know myself if I were starting
out afresh as a student.
Essential Features. OK, that’s the name I’ve given them in in DSM-5 Made Easy,
but they’re also known as prototypes. I’ve used them in an effort to make the
DSM-5 criteria more accessible. For years, we working clinicians have known that
when we evaluate a new patient, we don’t grab a list of emotional and behavioral
attributes and start ticking off boxes. Rather, we compare the data we’ve gathered
to the picture we’ve formed of the various mental and behavioral disorders.
When the data fit an image, we have an “aha!” experience and pop that diagnosis
into our list of differential diagnoses. (From long experience and conversations
with countless other experienced clinicians, I can assure you that this is exactly
how it works.)
Very recently, a study of mood and anxiety disorders* has found that clinicians
who make diagnoses by rating their patients against prototypes perform at least as
well as, and sometimes better than, other clinicians who adhere to strict criteria.
That is, it can be shown that prototypes have validity even greater than that of
some DSM diagnostic criteria. Moreover, prototypes are reported to be usable by
clinicians with a relatively modest level of training and experience; you don’t have
to be coming off 20 years of clinical work to have success with prototypes. And
clinicians report that prototypes are less cumbersome and more clinically useful.
(However—and I hasten to underscore this point—the prototypes used in the
studies I have just mentioned were generated from the diagnostic criteria
inherent in the DSM criteria.) The bottom line: Sure, we need criteria, but we can
adapt them so they work better for us.
12
So once you’ve collected the data and read the prototypes, I recommend that
you assign a number to indicate how closely your patient fits the ideal of any
diagnoses you are considering. Here’s the accepted convention: 1 = little or no
match; 2 = some match (the patient has a few features of the disorder); 3 =
moderate match (there are significant, important features of the disorder); 4 =
good match (the patient meets the standard—the diagnosis applies); 5 = excellent
match (a classic case). Obviously, the vignettes I’ve provided will always match at
the 4 or 5 level (if not, why would I use them as illustrative examples?), so I
haven’t bothered to grade them on the 5-point scale. But you should do just that
with each new patient you interview.
Of course, there may be times you’ll want to turn to the official DSM-5
criteria. One is when you’re just starting out, so you can get a picture of the exact
numbers of each type of criteria that officially count the patient as “in.” Another
would be when you are doing clinical research, where you must be able to report
that participants were all selected according to scientifically studied, reproducible
criteria. And even as an experienced clinician, I return to the actual criteria from
time to time. Perhaps it’s just to have in my mind the complete information that
allows me to communicate with other clinicians; sometimes it is related to my
writing. But mostly, whether I am with patients or talking with students, I stick to
the prototype method—just like nearly every other working clinician.
The Fine Print. Most of the diagnostic material included in these sections is what
I call boilerplate. I suppose that sounds pejorative, but each Fine Print section
actually contains one or more important steps in the diagnostic process. Think of
it this way: The prototype is useful for purposes of inclusion, whereas the
boilerplate is useful largely for the also important exclusion of other disorders and
delimitation from normal. The boilerplate verbiage includes several sorts of
stereotyped phrases and warnings, which as an aid to memory I’ve dubbed the
D’s. (I started out by using “Don’t disregard the D’s” or similar phrases, but soon
got tired of all the typing; so, I eventually adopted “the D’s” as shorthand.)
Differential diagnosis. Here I list all the disorders to consider as alternatives
when evaluating symptoms. In most cases, this list starts off with substance use
disorders and general medical disorders, which despite their relative
infrequency you should always place first on the list of disorders competing for
your consideration. Next I put in those conditions that are most treatable, and
hence should be addressed early. Only at the end do I include those that have
a dismal prognosis, or that you can’t do very much to treat. I call this the safety
principle of differential diagnosis.
13
Distress or disability. Most DSM-5 diagnostic criteria sets require that the
patient experience distress or some form of impairment (in work, social
interactions, interpersonal relations, or something else). The purpose is to
ensure that we discriminate people who are patients from those who, while
normal, perhaps have lives with interesting aspects.
As best I can tell, distress receives one definition in all of DSM-5 (Campbell’s Psychiatric Dictionary
doesn’t even list it). The DSM-5 sections on trichotillomania and excoriation (skin-picking) disorder
both describe distress as including negative feelings such as embarrassment and forfeiture of control.
It’s unclear, however, whether the same definition is employed anywhere else, or what might be the
dominant thinking throughout the manual. But for me, some combination of lost pride, shame, and
control works pretty well as a definition. (DSM-IV didn’t define distress anywhere.)
Duration. Many disorders require that symptoms be present for a certain
minimum length of time before they can be diagnosed. Again, this is to ensure
that we don’t go around indiscriminately handing out diagnoses to everyone.
For example, nearly everyone will feel blue or down at one time or another; to
qualify for a diagnosis of a depressive disorder, it has to hang on for at least a
couple of weeks.
Demographics. A few disorders are limited to certain age groups or genders.
Coding Notes. Many of the Essential Features listings conclude with these notes,
which supply additional information about specifiers, subtypes, severity, and
other subjects relevant to the disorder in question.
Here you’ll find information about specifying subtypes and judging severity for
different disorders. I’ve occasionally put in a signpost pointing to a discussion of
principles you can use to determine that a disorder is caused by the use of
substances.
Sidebars. To underscore or augment what you need to know, I have sprinkled
sidebar information throughout the text (such as the one above). Some of these
merely highlight information that will help you make a diagnosis quickly. Some
contain historical information and other sidelights about diagnoses that I’ve
found interesting. Many include editorial asides—my opinions about patients, the
diagnostic process, and clinical matters in general.
Vignettes. I have based this book on that reliable device, the clinical vignette. As
a student, I found that I often had trouble keeping in mind the features of
14
diagnosis (such as it was back then). But once I had evaluated and treated a
patient, I always had a mental image to help me remember important points
about symptoms and differential diagnosis. I hope that the more than 130
patients I have described in DSM-5 Made Easy will do the same for you.
Evaluation. This section summarizes my thinking for every patient I’ve written
about. I explain how the patient fits the diagnostic criteria and why I think other
diagnoses are unlikely. Sometimes I suggest that additional history or medical or
psychological testing should be obtained before a final diagnosis is given. The
conclusions stated here allow you to match your thinking against mine. There are
two ways you can do this. One is by picking out from the vignette the Essential
Features I’ve listed for each diagnosis. But when you want to follow the thinking
of the folks who wrote the actual DSM-5, I’ve also included references (in
parentheses) to the individual criteria. If you disagree with any of my
interpretations, I hope you’ll e-mail me ([email protected]). And for updated
information, visit my website: www.guilford.com/jm.
Final diagnosis. Usually code numbers are assigned in the record room, and we
don’t have to worry too much about them. That’s fortunate, for they are
sometimes less than perfectly logical. But to tell the record room folks how to
proceed, we need to put all the diagnostic material that seems relevant into
verbiage that conforms to the approved format. My final diagnoses not only
explain how I’d code each patient; they also provide models to use in writing up
the diagnoses for your own patients.
Tables. I’ve included a number of tables to try to give you an overall picture of
various topics—the variety of specifiers that apply across different diagnoses, a list
of physical disorders that can produce emotional and behavioral symptoms.
Those that are of principal use in a given chapter I’ve included in that chapter. A
few, which apply more generally throughout the book, you’ll find in the
Appendix.
My writing. Throughout, I’ve tried to use language that is as simple as possible.
My goal has been to make the material sound as though it was written by a
clinician for use with patients, not by a lawyer for use in court. Wherever I’ve
failed, I hope you will e-mail me to let me know. At some point, I’ll try to put it
right, either in a future edition or on my website (or both).
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STRUCTURE OF DSM-5 MADE EASY
The first 18 chapters* of this book contain descriptions and criteria for the major
mental diagnoses and personality disorders. Chapter 19 comprises information
concerning other terms that you may find useful. Many of these are Z-codes
(ICD-9 calls them V-codes), which are conditions that are not mental disorders
but may require clinical attention anyway. Most noteworthy are the problems
people with no actual mental disorder have in relating to one another.
(Occasionally, you might even list a Z-code/V-code as the reason a patient was
referred for evaluation.) Also described here are codes that indicate medications’
effects, malingering, and the need for more diagnostic information.
Chapter 20 contains a very brief description of diagnostic principles, followed
by some additional case vignettes, which are generally more complicated than
those presented earlier in the book. I’ve annotated these case histories to help you
to review the diagnostic principles and criteria covered previously. Of course, I
could include only a small fraction of all DSM-5 diagnoses in this section.
Throughout the book, I have tried to give you clinically relevant and accessible
information, written in simple, declarative sentences that describe what you need
to know in diagnosing a patient.
QUIRKS
Here are a few comments regarding some of my idiosyncrasies.
Abbreviations. I’ll cop to using some nonstandard abbreviations, especially for
the names of disorders. For example, BPsD (for brief psychotic disorder) isn’t
something you’ll read elsewhere, certainly not in DSM-5. I’ve used it and others
for the sake of shortening things up just a bit, and thus perhaps reducing ever so
slightly the amount of time it takes to read all this stuff. I use these ad hoc
abbreviations just in the sections about specific disorders, so don’t worry about
having to remember them longer than the time you’re reading about these
disorders. Indeed, I can think of two disorders that are sometimes abbreviated
CD and four that are sometimes abbreviated SAD, so always watch for context.
My quest for shortening has also extended to the chapter titles. In the service
of seeming inclusive, DSM-5 has sometimes overcomplicated these names, in my
view. So you’ll find that I’ve occasionally (not always—I’ve got my obsessive–
compulsive disorder under control!) shortened them up a bit for convenience.
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You shouldn’t have any problem knowing where to turn for sleep disorders
(which DSM-5 calls sleep–wake disorders), mood disorders (bipolar and related
disorders plus depressive disorders), psychotic (schizophrenia spectrum and other
psychotic) disorders, cognitive (neurocognitive) disorders, substance (substance-
related and addictive) disorders, eating (feeding and eating) disorders, and
various other disorders from which I’ve simply dropped and related from the
official titles. Similarly, I’ve sometimes dropped the /medication from
substance/medication-induced [just about anything].
{Curly braces}. I’ve used these in the Essential Features and in some tables to
indicate when there are two mutually exclusive specifier choices, such as {with}
{without} good prognostic features. Again, it just shortens things up a bit.
Severity specifiers. One of the issues with DSM-5 is its use of complicated
severity specifiers that differ from one chapter to another, and sometimes from
one disorder to the next. Some of these are easier to use than others.
For example, for the psychoses, we are offered the Clinician-Rated Dimensions
of Psychosis Symptom Severity (CRDPSS?), which asks us to rate on a 5-point
scale, based on the past 7 days, each of eight symptoms (the five psychosis
symptoms of schizophrenia [p. 58] plus impaired cognition, depression, and
mania); there is no overall score, only the eight individual components, which we
are encouraged to rate again every few days. My biggest complaint about this
scale, apart from its complexity and the time required, is that it gives us no
indication as to overall functioning—only the degree to which the patient
experiences each of the eight symptoms. Helpfully, DSM-5 informs us that we are
allowed to rate the patient “without using this severity specifier,” an offer that
many clinicians will surely rush to accept.
Evaluating functionality. Whatever happened to the Global Assessment of
Functioning (GAF)? In use from DSM-III-R through DSM-IV-TR, the GAF was
a 100-point scale that reflected the patient’s overall occupational, psychological,
and social functioning—but not physical limitations or environmental problems.
The scale specified symptoms and behavioral guidelines to help us determine our
patients’ GAF scores. Perhaps because of the subjectivity inherent in this scale, its
greatest usefulness lay in tracking changes in a patient’s level of functioning across
time. (Another problem: It was a mash-up of severity, disability, suicidality, and
symptoms.)
However, the GAF is now G-O-N-E, eliminated for several reasons (as
described in a 2013 talk by Dr. William Narrow, research director for the DSM-5
Task Force). Dr. Narrow (accurately) pointed out that the GAF mixed concepts
17
(psychosis with suicidal ideas, for example) and that it had problems with
interrater reliability. Furthermore, what’s really wanted is a disability rating that
helps us understand how well a patient can fulfill occupational and social
responsibilities, as well as generally participate in society. For that, the Task Force
recommends the World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule,
Version 2.0 (WHODAS 2.0), which was developed for use with clinical as well as
general populations and has been tested worldwide. DSM-5 gives it on page 747;
it can also be accessed online (www.who.int/classifications/icf/whodasii/en/). It is
scored as follows: 1 = none, 2 = mild, 3 = moderate, 4 = severe, and 5 = extreme.
Note that scoring systems for the two measures are reciprocal; a high GAF score
more or less equates with a low WHODAS 2.0 rating.
After quite a bit of experimentation, I decided that the WHODAS 2.0 is so
heavily weighted toward physical abilities that it poorly reflects the qualities
mental health clinicians are interested in. Some of the most severely ill mental
patients received a only a moderate WHODAS 2.0 score; for example, Velma
Dean scored 20 on the GAF but 1.6 on the WHODAS 2.0. In addition,
calculation of the WHODAS 2.0 score rests on the answers given by the patient
(or clinician) to 36 questions—a burden of data collection that many busy
professionals will not be able to carry. And, because these answers cover
conditions over the previous month, the score cannot accurately represent
patients with rapidly evolving mental disorders. The GAF, on the other hand, is a
fairly simple (if subjective) way to estimate severity.
So, after much thought, I’ve decided not to recommend the WHODAS 2.0
after all. (Anyone who is interested in further discussion can write to me; I’ll be
happy to send along a chart that compares the GAF with the WHODAS 2.0 for
every patient mentioned in this book.) Rather, here’s my fix as regards evaluating
function and severity, and it’s the final quirk I’ll mention: Go ahead and use the
GAF. Nothing says that we can’t, and I find it sometimes useful for tracking a
patient’s progress through treatment. It’s quick, easy (OK, it’s also subjective), and
free. You can specify the patient’s current level of functioning, or the highest level
in any past time frame. You’ll find it in the Appendix of this book.
USING THIS BOOK
There are several ways in which you might use DSM-5 Made Easy.
Studying a diagnosis. Of course, you might go about this in several ways, but
18
here’s how I’d do it. Scan the introductory information for some background,
then read the vignette. Next, compare the information in the vignette to the
Essential Features, to assure yourself that you can pick out what’s important
diagnostically. If you want to see how well the vignettes fit the actual DSM-5
criteria, read through the vignette evaluations; there I’ve touched upon each
of the important diagnostic points. In each evaluation section, you’ll also find a
discussion of the differential diagnosis, as well as some other conditions often
found in association with the disorder in question.
Evaluating a patient whose diagnosis you think you know. Read through the
Essential Features, then check the information you have on this patient against
the prototype. Assign a 1–5 score, using the key given above (p. 3). Check
through the D’s to make sure you’ve considered all disqualifying information
and relevant alternative diagnoses. If all’s well and you’ve hit the mark, I’d
also read through the evaluation section of the relevant vignette, just to make
sure you’ve understood the criteria. Then you might want to read the
introductory material for background.
Evaluating a new patient. Follow the sequence given just above, with one
exception: After identifying one of several areas of clinical interest as a
diagnostic possibility—let’s say an anxiety disorder—you might want to start
with the Quick Guide in the relevant chapter. There you will find capsule
statements (too brief even to be …