Shyness, grieving soon to be classified as mental illness

Published February 09, 2012

 

Millions of healthy people – including shy or defiant children, grieving relatives and people with fetishes – may be wrongly labeled mentally ill by a new international diagnostic manual, specialists said on Thursday.

In a damning analysis of an upcoming revision of the influential Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), psychologists, psychiatrists and mental health experts said its new categories and “tick-box” diagnosis systems were at best “silly” and at worst “worrying and dangerous.”

Some diagnoses – for conditions like “oppositional defiant disorder” and “apathy syndrome” – risk devaluing the seriousness of mental illness and medicalising behaviors most people would consider normal or just mildly eccentric, the experts said.

At the other end of the spectrum, the new DSM, due out next year, could give medical diagnoses for serial rapists and sex abusers – under labels like “paraphilic coercive disorder” – and may allow offenders to escape prison by providing what could be seen as an excuse for their behavior, they added.

The DSM is published by the American Psychiatric Association (APA) and has descriptions, symptoms and other criteria for diagnosing mental disorders. It is used internationally and is seen as the diagnostic “bible” for mental health medicine.

More than 11,000 health professionals have already signed a petition (at dsm5-reform.com) calling for the development of the fifth edition of the manual to be halted and re-thought.

“The proposed revision to DSM … will exacerbate the problems that result from trying to fit a medical, diagnostic system to problems that just don’t fit nicely into those boxes,” said Peter Kinderman, a clinical psychologist and head of Liverpool University’s Institute of Psychology at a briefing about widespread concerns over the book in London.

He said the new edition – known as DSM-5 – “will pathologise a wide range of problems which should never be thought of as mental illnesses.”

“Many people who are shy, bereaved, eccentric, or have unconventional romantic lives will suddenly find themselves labeled as mentally ill,” he said. “It’s not humane, it’s not scientific, and it won’t help decide what help a person needs.”

Radical, reckless and inhumane

Simon Wessely of the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London said a look back at history should make health experts ask themselves: “Do we need all these labels?”

He said the 1840 Census of the United States included just one category for mental disorder, but by 1917 the APA was already recognizing 59. That rose to 128 in 1959, to 227 in 1980, and again to around 350 disorders in the fastest revisions of DSM in 1994 and 2000.

Allen Frances, Emeritus professor at Duke University and chair of the committee that oversaw the previous DSM revision, said the proposed DSM-5 would “radically and recklessly expand the boundaries of psychiatry” and result in the “medicalisation of normality, individual difference, and criminality.”

As an unintended consequence, he said an emailed comment, many millions of people will get inappropriate diagnoses and treatments, and already scarce funds would be wasted on giving drugs to people who don’t need them and may be harmed by them.

Nick Craddock of Cardiff University’s department of psychological medicine and neurology, who also spoke at the London briefing, cited depression as a key example of where DSM’s broad categories were going wrong.

Whereas in previous editions, a person who had recently lost a loved one and was suffering low moods would be seen as experiencing a normal human reaction to bereavement, the new DSM criteria would ignore the death, look only at the symptoms, and class the person as having a depressive illness.

Other examples of diagnoses cited by experts as problematic included “gambling disorder,” “internet addiction disorder” and “oppositional defiant disorder” – a condition in which a child “actively refuses to comply with majority’s requests” and “performs deliberate actions to annoy others.”

“That basically means children who say ‘no’ to their parents more than a certain number of times,” Kinderman said. “On that criteria, many of us would have to say our children are mentally ill.”

AND THIS IS WHY WE SHOULD KICK THEM ALL TO THE CURB

Republicans are no better than Democrats, it was the Republicans who brought about all the infringement of personal liberty starting with the Patriot Act.    You want to still vote for these bastards, go ahead but don’t cry foul when they screw you even more, if that’s at all possible.   With Congressional approval at an all time low of 13% how can we justify keeping 87% of them? 

I am so friggin pissed off right now!!! Stupid fuckin’ voters, rat bastard congress, when will you idiots and traitors understand that Congress works for WE THE PEOPLE not the other way around!!! 

The Declaration of Independence dictates, by whatever means necessary, that we abolish the govt when it works against us but the Founders, some of the same guys who signed the Declaration signed the Constitution, put in place a system that the govt can stop us.  First they tell us to stop the govt then turn around and tell us we can’t.  Screw the Declaration, screw the constitution, screw the founders, why should we be the only ones screwed. 

Bane Windlow is spot on, we brought it on ourselves and we are ignoring what they are doing to us while we kick back and watch Kate plus 8 or some such shit.  I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, we are a nation of cowards!!!

Republicans Vote Overwhelmingly to Spy on You in Public

When George Orwell wrote 1984 he was ahead of his time, but I wonder if he truly knew just how accurate he was.  He just got the date wrong.  In the past week both the U.S. House and Senate voted on H.R. 658, the FAA Modernization and Reform Act, which “orders the Federal Aviation Administration to develop regulations for the testing and licensing of commercial drones by 2015.”

These drones will be placed over U.S. airspace around the country for surveillance.  Of course, the neo-cons are justifying their betrayal of the American people by citing the threat of terrorism to spy on us 24 hours a day every time we walk outside anywhere in the country.  They expect 30,000 of these to be in place within the next eight years.

People wonder how nations turn into a police state, well this is it.  Our elected “representatives” legalize this kind of government abuse and the American people sit on their asses and do nothing to push back because they are too busy caught up in trivial matters like how much Kim Kardashian is getting from her divorce settlement.  That or they embrace it because they are gullible and believe the propaganda fed to them that it’s all in the name of security.  You think this technology isn’t going to used to abuse your Constitutional rights once it’s in place?

In the House, the vast majority of Republicans voted to step on your liberty.  Most Democrats voted against it.  In the Senate, it was pretty much a bipartisan raping of the American people.

Here is the roll call for North and South Carolina.

Voting for the drones:

  • Renee Ellmers (R-NC-02)
  • Walter Jones (R-NC-03)
  • Virginia Foxx (R-NC-05)
  • Howard Coble (R-NC-06)
  • Mike McIntyre (D-NC-07)
  • Sue Myrick (R-NC-09)
  • Patrick McHenry (R-NC-10)
  • Joe Wilson (R-SC-02)

Voting against the drones:

  • G.K. Butterfield (D-NC-01)
  • David Price (D-NC-04)
  • Larry Kissell (D-NC-08)
  • Mel Watt (D-NC-12)
  • Brad Miller (D-NC-13)
  • Tim Scott (R-SC-01)
  • Jeff Duncan (R-SC-03)
  • Trey Gowdy (R-SC-04)
  • Mick Mulvaney (R-SC-05)
  • Jim Clyburn (D-SC-06)

Heath Shuler (D-NC-11) did not vote.

In the Senate, Senators Richard Burr (R-NC), Kay Hagan (D-NC), and Lindsey Graham (R-SC) voted for the drones.  Jim DeMint (R-SC) voted against them.

Now correct me if I’m wrong, but isn’t this “big government?”

http://www.carolinapoliticsonline.com/