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Categories That Should Be Removed From Mental Disorders Classifications: Perspectives and Rationales of Clinicians From Eight Countries

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Date
2015-03-01
Author
Robles, Rebeca
Fresan, Ana
Elena Medina-Mora, Maria
Sharan, Pratap
Roberts, Michael C.
Mari, Jair de Jesus [UNIFESP]
Matsumoto, Chihiro
Maruta, Toshimasa
Gureje, Oye
Luis Ayuso-Mateos, Jose
Xiao, Zeping
Reed, Geoffrey M.
Type
Artigo
ISSN
0021-9762
Is part of
Journal of Clinical Psychology
DOI
10.1002/jclp.22145
Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
ObjectiveTo explore the rationales of mental health professionals (mainly psychiatrists and psychologists) from 8 countries for removing specific diagnostic categories from mental disorders classification systems.MethodAs part of a larger study, 505 participants indicated which of 60 major disorders should be omitted from mental disorders classification systems and provided rationales. Rationale statements were analyzed using inductive content analysis.ResultsThe majority of clinicians (60.4%) indicated that 1 or more disorders should be removed. the most common rationales were (a) problematic boundaries between normal and psychopathological conditions (45.9% of total removal recommendations), (b) problematic boundaries among mental disorders (25.4%), and (c) problematic boundaries between mental and physical disorders (24.0%). the categories most frequently recommended for deletion were gender identity disorder, sexual dysfunction, and paraphilias, usually because clinicians viewed these categories as being based on stigmatization of a way of being and behaving. A range of neurocognitive disorders were described as better conceptualized as nonpsychiatric medical conditions. Results were analyzed by country and country income level. Although gender identity disorder was the category most frequently recommended for removal overall, clinicians from Spain, India, and Mexico were most likely to do so and clinicians from Nigeria and Japan least likely, probably because of social and systemic factors that vary by country. Systematic differences in removal rationales by country income level may be related to the development, structure, and functioning of health systems.ConclusionImplications for development and dissemination of the classification of mental and behavioral disorders in WHO's ICD-11 are discussed.
Citation
Journal of Clinical Psychology. Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell, v. 71, n. 3, p. 267-281, 2015.
Keywords
mental disorders
classification
International Classification of Diseases (ICD)
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)
clinical utility
psychologists
psychiatrists
stigma
Sponsorship
International Union of Psychological Science
National Institute of Mental Health (USA)
World Psychiatric Association
Spanish Foundation of Psychiatry and Mental Health (Spain)
Santander Bank UAM/UNAM endowed Chair for Psychiatry (Spain/Mexico)
URI
http://repositorio.unifesp.br/handle/11600/38807
Collections
  • Em verificação - Geral [8401]

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