[1] https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40489-016-0085-x
Mental disorder diagnostics are all 'Design by committee'. People get together and vote and they are argue and they create categorizations based on that. They do their compromises every time they need to update the book.
Diagnosis is then based on observed behavior and interviews. They don't do some sort of blood test, MRI scans, or X-rays or any other kind of medical diagnosis. Yeah, sure, there is some sort of questionable neuroimaging scan they can do, but none of that stuff ever gets used to actually diagnose people.
In terms of a science it's much closer to the 'sociology' side of things then 'search for the cure for cancer'.
The original purpose of DSM was so that psychologists and the lot have categorizations handy for filling out claims with patient's insurance. It's a lot easier to convince insurance companies to pay for treatments when the diagnosis is 'Attention deficit disorder' rather then 'Little Timmy is having a hard time sitting still in class and occasionally gets completely out of control'.
That doesn't mean these disorders don't exist or that DSM diagnoses are invalid or useless. It just means that it's all a bit 'hand wavy'.
True. Although, it is plausible that some DSM-5 disorders may have greater validity issues than others, and ASD may be one of those disorders with greater-than-average validity issues. The paper I cited built an extensive case, based on 14 separate research findings, to support the conclusion that ASD lacks validity. I wouldn't presume that if you repeated the same exercise for some other DSM-5 disorder you'd necessarily get an equally negative result.
> The original purpose of DSM was so that psychologists and the lot have categorizations handy for filling out claims with patient's insurance.
Which makes its use in research especially questionable. And this is part of why NIMH announced back in 2013 [1] that they were shifting research funding away from research based on DSM categories. If research based on the DSM-5 is dubious, then funding such research is not a good use of limited research funding resources. (It is worth noting this study was funded by NICHD not NIMH; I'd question whether NIMH would fund a study like this given its current funding criteria.)
> That doesn't mean these disorders don't exist or that DSM diagnoses are invalid or useless. It just means that it's all a bit 'hand wavy'.
What do you mean by "invalid"? If by "valid" one means biological validity and/or construct validity, then the whole point of the paper I cited was to argue that ASD lacks both forms of validity, and hence that in those senses of "valid", the diagnosis of ASD is invalid.
[1] https://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/directors/thomas-insel/blog/2...
This seems very high - I'd call in to question the validity of the diagnosis (these diagnoses are obviously somewhat subjective). Given that those numbers are for the total cohort, that suggests that something like a full half of the upper third of children were diagnosed with ADHD.
The diagnostic criteria for these conditions has two parts - the underlying symptoms themselves, and a severity test that indicates whether the person with them is unable to handle the symptoms well enough to do without treatment. This is explicitly in ADHD and autism spectrum diagnostic criteria, but to a good extent is an unavoidable part of it; if someone is quite brilliant and successful but a little strange, there's no reason for them to ever seek some kind of diagnosis.
I'd be very curious to see IQ test results here, as I suspect that it is an explanatory factor.
[1] https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2017/12/04/5677620...
Not just in Europe, actually in most of the world. The international standard name (International Nonproprietary Name or INN approved by the WHO) is paracetamol. For some drugs, instead of using the international standard name, the United States uses its own alternate naming system, the United States Adopted Name (USAN). A handful of other countries (most notably Canada and Japan) follow the US naming convention and call it acetaminophen too; the vast majority of the planet follows the WHO standard and calls it paracetamol.
Both acetaminophen and paracetamol come from a chemical name for the compound: para-acetylaminophenol and para-acetylaminophenol.
No real reason for why one took off in one area, versus the other, just what happened to stick!It doesn't seem like there's anything safe to take.
[1] https://www.cdc.gov/pregnancy/meds/treatingfortwo/features/p...
All three names are derived from the chemical name para-acetylaminophenol.
Also generically sold under a range of names.
Serious classic autism, on the other hand, is not affected by any sort of physician-seeking behavior.
This is just evil. Congratulations, now we have opiate addicts with needlessly destroyed livers as well...