Cultural Concepts
In an effort to improve diagnosis and care to people of all backgrounds, the fifth edition of the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of
... [Show More] Mental Disorders (DSM-5) incorporates a greater cultural sensitivity
throughout the manual. Rather than a simple list of culture-bound syndromes, DSM-5 updates criteria
to reflect cross-cultural variations in presentations, gives more detailed and structured information
about cultural concepts of distress, and includes a clinical interview tool to facilitate comprehensive,
person-centered assessments.
The Impact of Cultural Differences
Different cultures and communities exhibit or explain symptoms in various ways. Because of this, it is
important for clinicians to be aware of relevant contextual information stemming from a patient's culture,
race, ethnicity, religion or geographical origin. For example, uncontrollable crying and headaches
are symptoms of panic attacks in some cultures, while difficulty breathing may be the primary symptom
in other cultures. Understanding such distinctions will help clinicians more accurately diagnose problems
as well as more effectively treat them.
Cultural Considerations in Clinical Practice
Throughout the DSM-5 development process, the Work Groups made a concerted effort to modify
culturally determined criteria so they would be more equivalent across different cultures. In Section II,
specific diagnostic criteria were changed to better apply across diverse cultures. For example, the criteria
for social anxiety disorder now include the fear of "offending others" to reflect the Japanese concept
in which avoiding harm to others is emphasized rather than harm to oneself.
The new manual also addresses cultural concepts of distress, which detail ways in which different
cultures describe symptoms. In the Appendix, they are described through cultural syndromes, idioms
of distress, and explanations. These concepts assist clinicians in recognizing how people in different
cultures think and talk about psychological problems.
Finally, the cultural formulation interview guide will help clinicians to assess cultural factors influencing
patients' perspectives of their symptoms and treatment options. It includes questions about patients'
background in terms of their culture, race, ethnicity, religion or geographical origin. The interview provides
an opportunity for individuals to define their distress in their own words and then relate this to
how others, who may not share their culture, see their problems. This gives the clinician a more comprehensive
foundation on which to base both diagnosis and care.
DSM-V Diagnoses for Children
The fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) updates disorder
criteria to more precisely capture the experiences and symptoms of children. The book also features a
new lifespan approach to mental health. Rather than isolating childhood conditions, DSM-5's organization
underscores how they can continue to manifest at different stages of life and may be impacted by
the developmental continuum that influences many disorders.
Changes affecting children are evident before the manual's first page of text. Its table of contents reflects
a new framework that recognizes age-related aspects of disorders by arranging each diagnostic
chapter in a chronological fashion, with diagnoses most applicable to infancy and childhood listed first,
followed by diagnoses more common to adolescence and early adulthood, and ending with those relevant
to adulthood and later years. Thus, disorders previously addressed in a single "infancy, childhood
and adolescence" chapter are now integrated throughout the book.
Individual disorders, diagnostic categories and criteria were revised to better serve young patients. In
revising DSM-5, several factors motivated the Work Groups, including:
• Working with parents
• Defining a diagnostic home
• Developing more precise criteria
Parents' Integral Role
Throughout the development process for DSM-5, family and consumer advocacy organizations served
an important function in giving feedback on proposed changes and, in some cases, meeting with members
of the DSM-5 Work Groups. All revisions to the manual were made to more precisely describe and
diagnose the symptoms and behaviors of those seeking clinical help. Parents provided a particularly
valuable perspective on the framing around changes.
DSM-5 is a clinical guidebook for assessment and diagnosis of mental disorders and does not include
treatment guidelines or recommendations on services. That said, determining an accurate diagnosis
is the first step toward appropriate care. As with any medical issue, no child should ever be diagnosed
without a careful, comprehensive evaluation, and no medication should be prescribed without equal
vigilance. Parents play an integral role in this process as many of the DSM criteria require that symptoms
be observed by them or individuals who interact regularly with the child.
It is both appropriate and essential for parents to ask questions and provide information to clinicians
during a child's assessment. Parents' specific questions about their child's care should always be discussed
with the child's mental health clinician or pediatrician.
A Diagnostic Home
Clinicians and families often were frustrated that DSM-IV did not define or describe some of the clinically
significant behaviors and symptoms they observed in children. In an effort to improve diagnosis
and care, two new disorders are among the changes made to DSM-5 to provide children with an accurate
diagnostic home.
2 • DSM-5 and Diagnoses for Children
Social communication disorder (SCD) is characterized by a persistent difficulty with verbal and nonverbal
communication that cannot be explained by low cognitive ability. The child's acquisition and use
of spoken and written language is problematic, and responses in conversation are often difficult. Since
previous manuals did not provide an applicable diagnosis for individuals with such symptoms, there
was inconsistent treatment across clinics and treatment centers. SCD brings these children's social and
communication deficits out of the shadows of a "not otherwise specified" or similarly inexact diagnosis.
Also added to DSM-5 is disruptive mood dysregulation disorder (DMDD). It is characterized by severe
and recurrent temper outbursts that are grossly out of proportion to the situation in intensity or duration.
The outbursts occur, on average, three or more times each week for a year or more. The unique
features of DMDD necessitated a new diagnosis to ensure that children affected by this disorder get
appropriate clinical help.
More Precise Criteria
Existing criteria have been updated in DSM-5 to provide more precise descriptions and reflect the scientific
advances and clinical experience of the last two decades. Below are brief summaries of changes to
select disorders.
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) incorporates four disorders from the previous manual: autistic disorder,
Asperger's disorder, childhood disintegrative disorder, and the catch-all diagnosis of pervasive
developmental disorder not otherwise specified. Researchers found that those four diagnoses were
inconsistently applied across clinics and treatment centers and, rather than distinct disorders, actually
represented symptoms and behaviors along a severity continuum. ASD reflects that continuum and is a
more accurate and medically and scientifically useful approach. People diagnosed with one of the separate
DSM-IV disorders should still meet the criteria for autism spectrum disorder or a different DSM-5
diagnosis.
Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) now requires an individual's symptoms to be present
prior to age 12, compared to 7 as the age of onset in DSM-IV. Substantial research published since 1994
found no clinical differences between children with earlier versus later symptom onset in terms of their
disorder course, severity, outcome, or treatment response. Other criteria for diagnosing children with
ADHD remain unchanged.
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) includes a new subtype for children younger than 6. This change
is based on recent research detailing what PTSD looks like in young children. Adding the developmental
subtype should help clinicians tailor treatment in a more age-appropriate and age-effective way.
Specific Learning Disorder no longer limits learning disorders to reading, mathematics and written
expression. Rather, the DSM-5 criteria describe shortcomings in general academic skills and provide
detailed specifiers. Just as in DSM-IV, dyslexia is included in the descriptive text.
Eating disorders previously listed among Disorders Usually First Diagnosed in Infancy, Childhood, or
Adolescence are now listed in the Feeding and Eating Disorders chapter. They include pica, rumination
and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder.
DSM-5 and Diagnoses for Children • 3
Section III of DSM-5 lists conditions warranting more scientific research and clinical experience before
they might be considered for inclusion in the main book as formal disorders. Two conditions listed here
are particularly relevant for children and adolescents; both are regarded as major problems and public
health issues that need to be better understood. Nonsuicidal self-injury defines self-harm without the
intention of suicide. Internet gaming disorder deals with the compulsive preoccupation some people
develop in playing online games, often to the exclusion of other needs and interests.
More information about children with these and other challenging behaviors is available from:
• American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at www.aacap.org
• The Balanced Mind Foundation at www.thebalancedmind.org
• National Alliance on Mental Illness at www.nami.org
• Mental Health America at www.mentalhealthamerica.net.
Integrated (Dimensional) Assessment Process
The upcoming fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) introduces
an integration of a dimensional approach to diagnosis and classification with the current
categorical approach. Previous editions of DSM used a strictly categorical model requiring a clinician to
determine that a disorder was present or absent. The dimensional approach, which allows a clinician
more latitude to assess the severity of a condition and does not imply a concrete threshold between
"normality" and a disorder, is now incorporated via select diagnoses. Its inclusion will also provide
more utility in research contexts.
Disorders on a Spectrum
While all disorders in DSM-5 remain in specific categories, measures indicating degree of acuteness
have been added to several combined diagnoses.
For example, autism spectrum disorder (ASD) combines four different categorical disorders and conceptualizes
them as occurring along a single spectrum focused on dysfunctional social communication
and restricted, repetitive behaviors or interests. Under DSM-IV, patients with such symptoms could be
diagnosed with autistic disorder, Asperger's disorder, childhood disintegrative disorder, or the catch-all
diagnosis of pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified. But the diagnoses were not
consistently applied across practices and treatment centers, in large part because they shared such
similar characteristics. Researchers determined that these separate disorders are actually related conditions
along a single continuum of behavior. With ASD, some individuals show mild symptoms and others
have much more severe symptoms. This spectrum will allow clinicians to account for such variations
from person to person.
Another example of continuum-based assessment is evident in the new diagnosis of substance use
disorder. DSM-5 combines two separate diagnoses of abuse and dependence into a single spectrum of
eleven symptoms. In DSM-IV, the distinction between abuse and dependence was based on the concept
of abuse as a mild or early phase and dependence as the more severe manifestation. In practice,
that was an arbitrary dichotomy, as the abuse criteria were sometimes quite severe. The revised substance
use disorder better matches the symptoms that patients experience.
Building on Symptoms as the Foundation for Care
Using assessment models that also focus attention on the acuteness of symptoms helps clinicians
gather more information and thus more insight in creating a treatment plan. The narrow categorical
approach of previous DSM editions constricted the range of clinical information obtained, which often
could have significant implications for diagnosis, treatment planning, prognosis, and outcomes.
With greater depth of detail about symptoms—instead of simply marking them as present or absent—
DSM-5 will reduce the excess number of patients who would have been diagnosed under DSM-IV's
categorical approach as having a "not otherwise specified" diagnosis due to failure to meet thresholds
(e.g., patients with mild symptoms who might not fulfill threshold symptom counts but are in need of
treatment). Rather, the integrated approach moves these patients out of the "not otherwise specified"
2 • DSM-5's Integrated Approach to Diagnosis and Classification
category by tailoring their diagnosis to the particulars of each individual and providing a diagnosis that
is more informative and conducive to treatment planning than the residual diagnosis of "not otherwise
specified". Patients often do not fit precisely into one category or another, and the use of a spectrum in
DSM-5 mitigates that problem. Assessing on a spectrum also has benefits for research because the data
it produces is more reliable, stable and valid. Spectrum models are also preferred for hypothesis development
and testing.
To ensure DSM-5 is not overly disruptive to clinical practice, its spectrum measures are compatible with
categorical definitions. The new edition combines the best of both categorical and dimensional approaches
to provide better guidance to clinicians and, as a consequence better treatment to patients.
Mixed Features Specifier
The upcoming fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) will replace
the diagnosis of "mixed episode" with a mixed-features specifier that can be applied to episodes
of major depression, hypomania or mania. The change reflects ways these behaviors intersect and will
benefit diagnosis and care.
In DSM-IV, a diagnosis of mixed episode required an individual to simultaneously meet all criteria for
an episode of major depression and an episode of mania. During its review of the latest research, the
DSM-5 Mood Disorders Work Group recognized that individuals rarely meet full criteria for both episode
types at the same time. In order to be diagnosed with the new specifier in the case of major depression,
the new DSM-5 specifier will require the presence of at least three manic/hypomanic symptoms
that don't overlap with symptoms of major depression. In the case of mania or hypomania, the
specifier will require the presence of at least three symptoms of depression in concert with the episode
of mania/hypomania.
Using the Specifiers
If an individual is predominantly manic or hypomanic but also presents with depressive symptoms,
the mixed features specifier may be considered. Depressive symptoms may include depressed mood,
diminished interest or pleasure, slowed physical and emotional reaction, fatigue or loss of energy, and
recurrent thoughts of death. At least three of these symptoms must be present nearly every day during
the most recent week of a manic episode or during the most recent four days of a hypomanic episode.
Conversely, if an individual is predominantly depressed with some manic or hypomanic symptoms, the
mixed features specifier may also be considered. These manic or hypomanic symptoms may include elevated
mood, inflated self-esteem, decreased need for sleep and an increase in energy or goal-directed
activity. At least three of these symptoms must be present nearly every day during the most recent two
weeks of the major depressive episode.
Improving Diagnosis and Care
The specifier will allow clinicians to more accurately diagnose patients who may be suffering from
concurrent symptoms of depression and mania/hypomania, as well as better tailor treatment to their
behaviors. This is especially important since many patients with mixed features, depending on their
predominant symptoms, demonstrate poor response to lithium or become less stable when taking antidepressants.
Additionally, more accurately identifying these concurrent behaviors may allow clinicians
to recognize people with a unipolar disorder at increased risk of progression to bipolar disorder.
Neurodevelopmental Disorders
-Intellectual Disability (Intellectual
Developmental Disorder)
-Communication Disorders
-Autism Spectrum Disorder
-Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
-Specific Learning Disorder
-Motor Disorders
Intellectual Disability (Intellectual
Developmental Disorder)
emphasize the need for an assessment of both cognitive capacity (IQ) and adaptive functioning. Severity is determined by adaptive functioning rather than IQ score. The term mental retardation was used in DSM-IV. However, intellectual disability is the term that has come into common use over the past two decades among medical, educational, and other professionals, and by the lay public and advocacy groups. Moreover, a federal statue in the United States (Public Law 111-256, Rosa's Law) replaces the term "mental retardation with intellectual disability. Despite the name change, the deficits in cognitive capacity beginning in the developmental period, with the accompanying diagnostic criteria, are considered to constitute a
mental disorder. Because the ICD-11 will not be adopted for several years, intellectual disability was chosen as the current preferred term with the bridge term for the future in parentheses.
Communication Disorders
The DSM-5 communication disorders include language disorder (which combines DSM-IV expressive and mixed receptive-expressive language disorders), speech sound disorder (a new name for phonological disorder), and childhood-onset fluency disorder (a new name for stuttering). Also included is social (pragmatic) communication disorder, a new condition for persistent difficulties in the social uses of verbal and nonverbal communication. Because social communication deficits are one component of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), it is important to note that social (pragmatic) communication disorder cannot be diagnosed in the presence of restricted repetitive behaviors, interests, and activities (the other
component of ASD). The symptoms of some patients diagnosed with DSM-IV pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified may meet the DSM-5 criteria for social communication disorder.
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Autism spectrum disorder is a new DSM-5 name that reflects a scientific consensus that four previously separate disorders are actually a single condition with different levels of symptom severity in two core 2 • Highlights of Changes from DSM-IV-TR to DSM-5
domains. ASD now encompasses the previous DSM-IV autistic disorder (autism), Asperger's disorder, childhood disintegrative disorder, and pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified. ASD is characterized by 1) deficits in social communication and social interaction and 2) restricted repetitive
behaviors, interests, and activities (RRBs). Because both components are required for diagnosis of ASD, social communication disorder is diagnosed if no RRBs are present. [Show Less]