Education and Resources Week-DSM V

By on 3-28-2012 in Education Reform, Mental Health

Education and Resources Week-DSM V

Today, we are sharing information about the financial conflict controversy surrounding the May 2013 release of the next mental health “bible” called Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders  version 5, known as DSM-V or DSM 5.


Conditions added to this manual essentially allow insurance to bill for medications. It does not necessarily advance care to the patient.

There is a controversy not only over drug company ties, but with introducing diagnoses that lack evidence, such as “grief after the loss of a loved one, mild memory loss in the elderly and frequent temper tantrums in kids would constitute psychiatric disorders.”

Labeling a child can lead to coverage of some types of services, which is good. It also stigmatizes and in this case it can pathologize normal boundaries of behaviors. This also needs to be viewed with the lens of the US foster care system and their documented overmedicating of children.

DSM-5 Criticized for Financial Conflicts of Interest [ABC News 3/13/12 by Katie Moisse] says “After the 1994 release of DSM-4, the APA instituted a policy requiring expert advisors to disclose drug industry ties. But the move toward transparency did little to cut down on conflicts, with nearly 70 percent of DSM-5 task force members reporting financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies — up from 57 percent for DSM-4.

“Organizations like the APA have embraced transparency too quickly as the solution,” said Lisa Cosgrove, associate professor of clinical psychology at the University of Massachusetts-Boston and lead author of the study published today in the journal PLoS Medicine. “Our data show that transparency has not changed the dynamic.”

The DSM is developed by an APA-appointed task force and panels consisting of experts in various fields of psychiatry. But many of these experts serve as paid spokespeople or scientific advisors for drug companies, or conduct industry-funded research. Some of most conflicted panels are those for which drugs represent the first line of treatment, with two-thirds of the mood disorders panel, 83 percent of the psychotic disorders panel and 100 percent of the sleep disorders panel disclosing “ties to the pharmaceutical companies that manufacture the medications used to treat these disorders or to companies that service the pharmaceutical industry,” according to the study.

The DSM-5 has also drawn criticism for introducing new diagnoses that some experts argue lack scientific evidence. Dr. Allen Frances, who chaired the revisions committee for DSM-4, said the new additions would “radically and recklessly” expand the boundaries of psychiatry.

“They’re at the boundary of normality,” said Frances, who is professor emeritus of psychiatry at Duke University. “And these days, most diagnostic decisions are not made by psychiatrists trained to distinguish between the two. Most are made by primary care doctors who see a patient for about seven minutes and write a prescription.”

Under the new criteria, grief after the loss of a loved one, mild memory loss in the elderly and frequent temper tantrums in kids would constitute psychiatric disorders. An online petition challenging the proposed changes, which would label millions more Americans as mentally ill, has accrued more than 12,000 signatures.[See petition at http://dsm5-reform.com/the-open-letter-committee-calls-for-independent-review-of-dsm-5/]

“We’re not opposed to the proper use of psychiatric drugs when there’s a real diagnosis and when a child or an adult needs pharmacological intervention,” said David Elkins, president of the American Psychological Association’s society for humanistic psychology and chairman of the committee behind the petition. “But we are concerned about the normal kids and elderly people who are going to be diagnosed with these disorders and treated with psychiatric drugs. We think that’s very, very dangerous.”

Elkins said he’s “dismayed” that seven in 10 DSM-5 task force members have drug company ties.

“In the beginning, our committee didn’t want to go there because it brings into question the intentions and, to some degree the character of the people involved. But I think it’s important to at least make these facts known without assassinating character in the process,” he said

APA medical director and CEO Dr. James Scully insisted the DSM-5 development process “is the most open and transparent of any previous edition of the DSM.”

“We wanted to include a wide variety of scientists and researchers with a range of expertise and viewpoints in the DSM-5 process. Excluding everyone with direct or indirect funding from the industry would unreasonably limit the participation of leading mental health experts in the DSM-5 development process,” he said in a statement.

Cosgrove said she believes there are plenty mental health professionals with no financial ties to drug companies. If necessary, experts with conflicts could still participate in the process as non-voting advisors, she said.

“My best hope would be for the APA to respond in a substantive way to the concerns we’ve raised,” she said. “They have an opportunity here to make a correction that would give the appearance, if not the reality of developing a diagnostic instrument that’s objective and has integrity.”

REFORM Puzzle Piece

One Comment

  1. I have a mental illness. Actually, I have 2 mental illnesses. My GP spends significantly more time with me than any psychiatrist I have ever seen. The last psychiatrist I had talked to me for less than 10 minutes, had me fill out a question form, never made eye contact, and tried to tag other labels on me. He was rude, dismissive, and condescending. I never went back. I am currently unmedicated and will remain that way unless I go through my GP. My GP, has never rushed me, sits with me, talks through every symptom, side effect, etc… I've been dealing with mental illness for 20 years and I can tell you that this article is skewed. I wonder how much research they put into what a psychiatrist really does with a patient.

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