American Counseling Association releases letter: Calls for external review of DSM-5

American Counseling Association releases letter: Calls for external review of DSM-5

Post #113 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-1pF

       

The Coalition for DSM-5 Reform Petition can be viewed here iPetition

 

ACA In The News

Press Release 11.17.11

ACA Expresses DSM-5 Concerns to the American Psychiatric Association

Yesterday, November 17, the American Counseling Association (ACA) released a letter from ACA President Don W. Locke to the to the American Psychiatric Association on behalf of professional counselors expressing current concerns about the DSM-5 revision process. The letter focuses on the need for better empirical evidence, the lack of information about proposed dimensional and cross cutting assessments, problems with the ongoing field trials, concerns about the biological emphasis of the revised definition of mental disorders, and the need for greater transparency.

To view the ACA letter sent to American Psychiatric Association President John Oldham, open here in PDF format:

            ACA letter to DSM-5 Task Force November 2011

Full text below, with brief commentary from Dr Allen Frances, MD, who had chaired the DSM-IV Task Force.

 

DSM-5 Blog

Counselor’s Turn Against DSM-5: Can APA Ignore 120,000 Users?

Allen Frances, MD | 17 November 2011

The users’ revolt against DSM-5 marches on and just became a much, much bigger parade. There are 120,000 counselors in the US — more than 20% of all mental health professionals — and DSM-5 is integral to their daily work. The American Counseling Association DSM-5 Task Force, skillfully led by Dr Dayle Jones, has made a meticulous study of DSM-5 and is alarmed by many of its suggestions.

The following open letter from the ACA president to the president of the American Psychiatric Association, quoted in full, was just posted. It nicely summarizes what is wrong with DSM-5 and recommends essential corrective actions. How long can DSM-5 afford to battle with its users?

***

Dear Dr. Oldham:

I am sending this letter on behalf of the American Counseling Association (ACA), the world’s largest association for professional counselors. There are 120,000 licensed professional counselors in the United States; as such, we represent the second largest group that routinely uses the DSM.

ACA appreciates the efforts of the American Psychiatric Association (APA) and the Task Force to update the manual according to new scientific evidence. However, professional counselors have voiced several concerns about the DSM-5 development process and they have reservations about many of the proposed revisions. We believe resolving these issues are critical to counselors’ continued confidence in the DSM as a tool for competent and ethical diagnosis of psychopathology. Our concerns focus on empirical evidence, dimensional and cross-cutting assessments, field trials, the definition of mental disorder, and transparency.

Empirical Evidence. While we appreciate APA’s commitment to quality research, counselors are concerned that a number of the DSM-5 proposals have little basis in empirical studies. A systematic and independent review of the research base is critical when revising diagnostic criteria. Unfortunately, guidelines for conducting evidence-based reviews (eg, Kendler et al., 2009) were not provided to work groups until approximately 18 months after revisions had begun. The rationales posted on the DSM-5 website provide either incomplete or insufficient empirical evidence to support many of the proposed revisions. Reportedly in response to this, the DSM-5 Task Force appointed a Scientific Review Committee (SRC) charged with reviewing the empirical evidence supporting the proposed revisions. While we strongly applaud this decision, we would like more information as to how the SRC will conduct their review so that those outside the process can be assured of the solidity of the empirical evidence behind the proposals.

Dimensional and Cross-Cutting Assessments. ACA members were initially supportive of the idea of using dimensional and cross-cutting assessments, but our review of the proposed assessments on the DSM-5 website causes us considerable worry. Little information regarding scale development has been provided and, according to the field trial protocols, there is no evaluation using external validators. Furthermore, more than half the disorders—including important disorders such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and conduct disorder—have no assessments posted on the website, so we cannot effectively evaluate all of the measures being proposed.

Field Trials. Evaluating diagnostic validity using “a variety of external criteria” is essential in developing or revising diagnostic criteria (Kraemer, 2007, p. S9). Yet, the DSM-5 field trial protocols focus exclusively on reliability, feasibility, and user acceptability. There is an absence of external validators (i.e., evaluation of validity using external criterion measures); thus, there is no way of determining whether any of the proposed changes improve the validity of the DSM. Furthermore, since the DSM-IV and DSM-5 criteria are not being simultaneously applied to the same clients, there is no way to assess the impact of changes on prevalence rates of the various mental disorders.

Definition of Mental Disorder. The DSM-5 Task Force has proposed a new definition of mental disorder which includes, “A behavioral or psychological syndrome or pattern that occurs in an individual that reflects an underlying psychobiological dysfunction” (APA, 2011). Using the term psychobiological implies that all mental disorders have an underlying biological component. Although advances in neuroscience have greatly enhanced our understanding of psychopathology, the current science does not fully support a biological connection for all mental disorders. We therefore request that the definition of mental disorder be amended to indicate that mental disorders may not have a biological component.

Transparency. Although the DSM-5 Task Force has described its development process as “open, transparent and free of bias” (Kupfer and Regier, 2009, p. 40), all work group members were required to sign confidentiality agreements that prohibit them from divulging information about the DSM-5 process, even after it is published. Most problematic, the reports of the DSM-5 SRC are not available for public inspection, which is a violation of one of the most basic and vital tenets of science—open access to data and/or processes for independent evaluation and critique. Without full transparency and openness, counselors may have difficulty having confidence in and trusting the DSM-5.

In conclusion, based on these issues, professional counselors have expressed uncertainty about the quality and credibility of the DSM-5. Therefore, to ensure continued trust and confidence in the

DSM-5, we ask that the APA carry out the following recommendations:

1. Make public all empirical evidence submitted to the DSM-5 Scientific Review Work Group, as well as the group’s evaluations and recommendations.

2. Submit all evidence and data (from work groups and field trials) for review by an external, independent group of experts in evidenced-based decision-making and make the results of this review public.

3. Remove any DSM-5 proposed revisions deemed to lack strong empirical evidence by external, independent review, or add them to the Appendix for Criteria Sets Provided for Further Study.

4. Eliminate any dimensional or cross-cutting assessments that lack supportive reliability and validity evidence, limited feasibility and poor clinical utility.

We appreciate and value the work APA has done in developing a diagnostic classification system that is used by over half a million non-psychiatric mental health professionals in the United States. However, to produce a credible diagnostic manual, it is essential that the DSM-5 be based on research that involves rigorous, systematic, and objective procedures; an open process; and independent, objective scientific review.

Sincerely,
Don W. Locke, PhD
ACA President

References [as they appear in Dr Locke’s open letter, located at http://www.counseling.org/Resources/pdfs/ACA_DSM-5_letter_11-11.pdf ]

American Psychiatric Association (APA). (2011). Definition of mental disorder. Retrieved from http://www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevisions/Pages/proposedrevision.aspx?rid=465

Kendler K, Kupfer D, Narrow W, Phillips K, Fawcet J. (2009). Guidelines for making changes to DSM-V. Retrieved from http://www.dsm5.org/ProgressReports/Documents/Guidelines-for-Making-Changes-to-DSM_1.pdf

Kraemer HC. (2007) DSM categories and dimensions in clinical and research contexts. International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research, 16(S1), S8-S15

Kupfer DJ, Regier DA. (2009). Counterpoint: Toward credible conflict of interest policies in clinical psychiatry. Psychiatric Times, 26(1), 40-41.

——————

The letter to John M. Oldham, MD, APA President, has been CCd to

Dilip V. Jeste, MD, President-Elect
Roger Peele, MD, Secretary
David Fassler, MD, Treasurer
Carol Ann Bernstein, MD, APA Past President
Alan F. Schatzberg, MD, APA Past President
Nada L. Stotland, MD,  MPH APA Past President
Joyce A. Spurgeon, MD, APA ECP Trustee-at-large
Frederick J. Stoddard Jr, MD, APA Area 1 Trustee
James E. Nininger, MD, APA Area 2 Trustee
Brian Crowley, MD, APA Area 3 Trustee
John J. Wernert III, MD, APA Area 4 Trustee
James A. Greene, MD, APA Area 5 Trustee
Marc David Graff, MD, APA Area 6 Trustee
William M. Womack, MD, APA Area 7 Trustee
Ann Marie T. Sullivan, MD, APA Speaker
R. Scott Benson, MD, APA Speaker-Elect
Sarah B. Johnson, MD, APA Member-in-training Trustee
Alik S. Widge, MD, PhD, APA Member-in-training Trustee-Elect
Brian Hurley, MD, APA/Public Psychiatry Fellow
Kimberly Gordon, MD, APA/SAMHSA Fellow
Sarah Faad, MD, American Psychiatric Leadership Fellow
James H. Scully Jr, MD, Medical Director & CEO

Coalition for DSM-5 Reform: Petition Update 1

Coalition for DSM-5 Reform: Petition Update 1

Post #112 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-1n4

For the most recent updates and media coverage see Coalition for DSM-5 Reform tab page.

All enquiries relating to the Coalition for DSM-5 Reform, the Open Letter and associated iPetition should be addressed to Dr David Elkins and the Coalition for DSM-5 Reform Committee.

Coalition for DSM-5 Reform: Petition Update 1

The Petition was launched on 22 October by three committee members of Division 32:

David N. Elkins, Ph.D.      Email:  David Elkins
President, Society for Humanistic Psychology, Division 32 of the American Psychological Association

Brent Dean Robbins, Ph.D.      Email:  Brent Dean Robbins
Secretary, Division 32, Society for Humanistic Psychology, American Psychological Association

Sarah R. Kamens, M.A.  
Doctoral Candidate in Clinical Psychology, Fordham University, Student Representative, Division 32

The committee has co-opted

Jonathan D. Raskin, Ph.D.     Email:  Jonathan D. Raskin
Fellow, Society for Humanistic Psychology, Division 32, American Psychological Association;
Fellow, Society for Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology, Division 24, American Psychological Association; Member, American Counseling Association

Donna Rockwell, Ph.D.

Frank Farley, Ph.D.

Media enquiries

Media enquiries and enquiries from professional organizations who would like to discuss endorsement of the Coalition’s Open Letter should be addressed to David Elkins and Brent Dean Robbins.

 

The Open Letter and Petition sponsored by the Society for Humanistic Psychology (Division 32 of the American Psychological Association), in alliance with several other APA Divisions, has attracted nearly 10,000 signatures since launching quietly, on 22 October.

26 mental health professional bodies are now endorsing the Open Letter which is highly critical of many of the draft criteria and categories being proposed for the revision of DSM-IV by the American Psychiatric Association’s  13 DSM-5 Work Groups. See the Coalition for DSM-5 Reform website for a list of organizations endorsing the Petition.

The American Psychiatric Association has scheduled a third and final stakeholder review for early 2012 with the next version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders slated for publication in May 2013.

Alarmed by the potential dangers they see in many of the current proposals, released in May 2011, the Petition sponsors are inviting mental health professionals and mental health organizations to sign up in support of their Open Letter to the American Psychiatric Association’s DSM-5 Development Task Force.

The Coalition for DSM-5 Reform is calling for the American Psychiatric Association to submit DSM-5 to independent scientific review or drop its most controversial proposals.

You can view the Open Letter and sign the iPetition here.

Of particular concern to the Sponsors are:

(1) The lowering of diagnostic thresholds, which may artificially inflate the prevalence of numerous disorders. By increasing the number of people who qualify for a diagnosis, DSM-5 may lead to the excessive medicalization and stigmatization of normative or transient distress.

(2) The potential consequences of lowered thresholds and new disorder categories on vulnerable populations such as children and the elderly. These populations are already at risk for excessive and inappropriate treatment with medications that have dangerous side effects. We are particularly concerned about the overuse of medications for “Attenuated Psychosis Syndrome,” “Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder,” “Mild Neurocognitive Disorder,” Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, and Generalized Anxiety Disorder.

(3) The lack of scientific evidence substantiating many of these new proposals.

 

The Coalition for DSM-5 Reform has opened a number of platforms

Open Letter and iPetition

Coalition for DSM-5 Reform on Twitter    @dsm5reform

Coalition for DSM-5 Reform on Facebook 

Coalition for DSM-5 Reform website 

This initiative is also being covered on

The Society for Humanistic Psychology Blog

The Society for Humanistic Psychology on Twitter    @HumanisticPsych

The Society for Humanistic Psychology Blog on Facebook 

Media coverage is being collated under the Coalition for DSM-5 Reform tab (far right of navigation tabs)

Developments

On November 4, the Special Projects Manager, Office of Communications & Public Affairs, American Psychiatric Association, sent a letter via email from the DSM-5 Task Force to the Editor of Psychiatric Times. 

Curiously, the letter (incorrectly dated “October 4”) was unsigned by either Task Force Chair, David Kupfer, MD, or Vice-chair, Darrel Regier, MD. And although it was addressed to both Melba J.T. Vasquez, Ph.D., President American Psychological Association, and David N. Elkins, Ph.D., President, Society for Humanistic Psychology and chair of the Open Letter and Petition committee, neither had been sent a copy by the Task Force or by the American Psychiatric Association’s Office of Communications & Public Affairs.

In the absence of clarification, we can only surmise that the Task Force had submitted their letter to the Editor of Psychiatric Times with a view to publication.

The American Psychiatric Association subsequently published a copy of the Task Force’s response to the Open Letter and Petition, here on the DSM-5 Development website (with the date amended).

Or open a PDF version of the Task Force’s letter  here:

             DSM-5 Task Force response to Society for Humanistic Psychology 11.04.11

Text version follows:

American Psychiatric Association

1000 Wilson Boulevard
Suite 1825
Arlington, VA 22209
Telephone 703.907.7300
Fax 703.907.1085
E-mail apa@psych.org
nternet www.psych.org

November 4, 2011

Melba J.T. Vasquez, Ph.D., President
American Psychological Association
750 First Street, N.E.
Washington, DC 20002-4242

David N. Elkins, Ph.D., President
Society for Humanistic Psychology
750 First Street, N.E.
Washington, DC 20002-4242

Dear President Vasquez and President Elkins,

We are appreciative of the thoughtful concerns expressed in the Open Letter about the introduction of new diagnoses, proposals for modifying criteria definitions and thresholds for existing diagnoses. The current draft of the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria, still more than a year away from publication, is continually being refined and reworked by the DSM-5 Task Force and Work Group members. Final decisions about proposed revisions will be made on the basis of field trial data as well as on a full consideration of other issues such as those raised by the signatories to this petition, the 10,000 individuals who responded to the February 2010 and April 2011 postings of draft criteria on DSM5.org, other internal reviews by a Scientific Review Committee, the DSM-5 Task Force, and the APA Board of Trustees.

This level of both internal and external review and field trial exposure has never before been undertaken by any previous DSM or ICD revision proposals.

We wish to clarify several specific issues you raise. Several disorders that were mentioned, such as Parental Alienation Syndrome, were proposed by outside groups but have not been proposed for inclusion by the Task Force. Some of the newer diagnoses, including Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder (DMDD), Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), Attenuated Psychosis Syndrome Disorder (APSD), Complex Somatic Symptom Disorder (CSDD) [sic], Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD), and Personality Disorders are all being tested in the 11 large academic field trial centers that have enrolled over 2,000 patients in a rigorous test-retest design to assess the reliability and clinical utility of proposed criteria. Based on the results of these field trials the DSM-5 Task Force and Work Groups will review the criteria for any necessary changes.

The definition of a mental disorder that is contained in DSM-IV is also undergoing thorough review by the Task Force, which has not adopted the proposed revision that was published by Stein et al. in Psychological Medicine. There is certainly no intent on the part of the DSM-5 Task Force to diminish the importance of environmental and cultural exposure factors as etiological contributors to mental disorders – as indicated by an active study group charged with developing a cultural formulation section as well as culture specific expression issues for individual diagnoses.

We should also note that the DSM-5 Task Force and Work Groups include a multi-disciplinary mix of clinical and research experts in which psychologists are prominent members. There is also another field trial taking place in Routine Clinical Practice settings that will include psychiatrists and approximately 500 of each mental health specialty group of psychologists, social workers, psychiatric nurses clinical counsellors, and marriage and family counselors. The full range of disorders will be assessed in this field trial and the findings will contribute to the final decisions about the diagnoses.

We wish to express our appreciation to all of the clinicians and research investigators who have invested such intense interest and energy in assuring that the next revision of DSM will be based on the best available clinical experience and research evidence in an effort to improve patient care and our understanding of mental illnesses. We hear your concerns and are aware of those from others in the mental health field, and take them under serious consideration in our deliberations.

Please continue to visit and review the DSM-5 website for changes to the criteria, the rationale for proposed changes from DSM-IV, and an extensive set of research analyses on www.dsm5.org. We will be opening the website for public comment on the draft criteria and chapter organization one final time in 2012. We invite you all to submit your comments during that time so they can be reviewed thoroughly and systematically by the DSM-5 Task Force and Work Group members.

We would be most appreciative if you would share this information with your members.

Sincerely,

DSM-5 Task Force Members

[Ends]

On November 7, the Coalition for DSM-5 Reform responded to the Task Force:

Open the letter here in PDF format:

            Response to DSM-5 Task Force 11.07.11

Text version follows:

Response to Letter from DSM-5 Task Force and the American Psychiatric Association:

Society of Humanistic Psychology

November 7, 2011

ATTENTION:
David J. Kupfer, M.D., Chair of DSM-5 Task Force
Darrel A. Ragier [sic], M.D., M.P.H., Vice Chair of DSM-5 Task Force
John M. Oldham, M.D., President of the American Psychiatric Association
Dilip V. Jeste, M.D., President-Elect of the American Psychiatric Association
Roger Peele, M.D., Secretary of the American Psychiatric Association

To the DSM-5 Task Force and the American Psychiatric Association:

Thank you for your response to the Open Letter that was composed by the Society for Humanistic Psychology (Division 32 of the American Psychological Association) and endorsed by over 4,600 individuals and 17 organizations, including nine other divisions of the American Psychological Association. In this context, it should be noted that the American Psychological Association itself has not taken a position on this matter other than to encourage its members to participate in the DSM-5 development process. It is our understanding that President Melba Vasquez will be responding to your letter separately on behalf of the American Psychological Association. We are writing on behalf of the Society for Humanistic Psychology Open Letter Committee to express our gratitude that the Task Force has opened a public dialogue about these issues and to let you know that we are happy to share your letter with our membership. We are pleased that the Task Force will consider the issues we described in our Open Letter as well as those raised by others in the mental health field.

However, we remain deeply concerned about the issues we raised and find that your response did not adequately address them. Our main concerns include:

(1) The lowering of diagnostic thresholds, which may artificially inflate the prevalence of numerous disorders. By increasing the number of people who qualify for a diagnosis, DSM-5 may lead to the excessive medicalization and stigmatization of normative or transient distress.

(2) The potential consequences of lowered thresholds and new disorder categories on vulnerable populations such as children and the elderly. These populations are already at risk for excessive and inappropriate treatment with medications that have dangerous side effects. We are particularly concerned about the overuse of medications for “Attenuated Psychosis Syndrome,” “Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder,” “Mild Neurocognitive Disorder,” Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, and Generalized Anxiety Disorder.

(3) The lack of scientific evidence substantiating many of these new proposals.

Our rationale for these concerns can be found in our open letter, which is available at http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/dsm5/ for all interested mental health professionals to sign.

Although we appreciate your explanations of the Task Force’s activities, we did not find them sufficient to address our concerns for the following reasons:

A single set of field trials, no matter how large and diverse the sample size, is not an adequate replacement for a body of scientific literature that is built over time through the contributions of multiple and independent researchers. Many of the newly proposed disorder categories lack this important and critically necessary body of scientific support.

Though reliability and utility are important, we are also concerned about validity and potential social consequences. As you know, increasing the number of people who qualify for a psychiatric diagnosis may lead to epidemiological inflation and, as a consequence, the inappropriate medication and stigmatization of individuals with normative conditions. It also leads to ethical and moral concerns about our professions.

Though we are pleased to learn you are not considering the inclusion of several conditions proposed by outside sources (such as Parental Alienation Disorder), it would help to avoid confusion if you removed these conditions from the list of DSM-5 considerations at your website (where they still appear as of 11/7/11):

http://www.dsm5.org/proposedrevision/Pages/Conditions-Proposed-by-Outside-Sources.aspx

We do not assume that the Task Force is intentionally deemphasizing social and psychological explanations. However, the proposed language deemphasizes social and psychological explanations and may lead to the pathologization of sociopolitical deviance. We emphasize again that the Stein et al. definition of mental disorder would result in the scientifically unsubstantiated reduction of all DSM-defined disorders to biological bases.

We are aware that the DSM-5 Task Force and Work Groups include not only psychiatrists but also some psychologists and other mental health professionals. However, these teams represent a highly selective and circumscribed group of academic mental health professionals whose experiences differ from those of mental health professionals working in the field on an everyday basis. The purpose of the open letter is to represent the wide spectrum of voices in our community.

We believe it is important that the Task Force give serious consideration to the public feedback by thousands of mental health professionals and others who have signed the open letter to date. The open letter’s list of individual and organizational signatories continues to grow. As of today, we have over 4,600 individual signatures as well as endorsements from the following organizations: Behavioral Neuroscience and Comparative Psychology (Division 6 of the American Psychological Association), the Division of Developmental Psychology (Division 7 of the American Psychological Association), the Society for Community Research and Action: Division of Community Psychology (Division 27 of the American Psychological Association), Psychotherapy (Division 29 of the American Psychological Association), the Society for the Psychology of Women (Division 35 of the American Psychological Association), the Division of Psychoanalysis (Division 39 of the American Psychological Association), Psychologists in Independent Practice (Division 42 of the American Psychological Association), the Society for Group Psychology and Psychotherapy (Division 49 of the American Psychological Association), the Society for the Psychological Study of Men & Masculinity (Division 51 of the American Psychological Association), the Association for Women in Psychology, the Society for Personality Assessment, the Society for Descriptive Psychology, the UK Council for Psychotherapy (UKCP), the Constructivist Psychology Network (CPN), the Taos Institute, Psychoanalysis for Social Responsibility (Section IX of Division 39 of the American Psychological Association), and the Association for Counselor Education and Supervision (Division of the American Counseling Association). In addition, some are now considering a consumer petition that could tap into the concerns of hundreds of thousands of consumers. We believe you are also aware that the British Psychological Society (nearly 50, 000 members), the American Counseling Association (45,000 members), and two previous chairs of DSM Task Forces have also raised concerns about the current proposals for DSM-5.

Again, we appreciate the Task Force’s assurance that the concerns expressed in our open letter will be taken into consideration. However, we believe these concerns to be of sufficient gravity to warrant more than confidential deliberations among those who invented and supported the problematic proposals. Further, the scientific review of DSM-5 conducted by the American Psychiatric Association was internal, and both the methods and findings of that review remain completely undisclosed to the public.

In view of the above concerns, as well as the unprecedented level of criticism of DSM-5 as currently proposed, we respectfully request an external review of the DSM-5 proposals by scientists and scholars who are not appointed by or affiliated with the American Psychiatric Association. We believe that only such an external review (alongside the implementation of any revisions recommended by the reviewers) will assure the mental health professions that DSM-5 is credible and safe to use.

For the future welfare of our clients/patients, as well as for the credibility of our professions, we hope you will submit the DSM-5 to independent, comprehensive, and scientific review.

Yours sincerely,

David N. Elkins, Ph.D.
President, Society for Humanistic Psychology, Division 32 of the American Psychological Association

Brent Dean Robbins, Ph.D.
Secretary, Division 32, Society for Humanistic Psychology, American Psychological Association

Sarah R. Kamens, M.A.
Doctoral Candidate in Clinical Psychology, Fordham University, Student Representative, Division 32

On November 8, the Coalition for DSM-5 Reform issued a press release:

Scientists and Clinicians Warn about Dangerous Implications of DSM-5

For Immediate Release: November 8, 2011 – It started as a small committee of three persons from the Society for Humanistic Psychology (SHP) who were alarmed about the potential dangers they saw in the proposed DSM-5. Of particular concern were increased risks to vulnerable populations of children and the elderly, possible increases in the number of people who will be diagnosed with a mental disorder, and the lack of scientific basis behind some of the proposals. But what could three people do?

So far, they have generated almost 5000 signatures from mental health professionals from around the world, supporting an Open Letter to the DSM-5 Task Force and the American Psychiatric Association, posted in an online petition

(http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/dsm5/).

Additionally, to date 10 Divisions of the American Psychological Association and 7 other psychology organizations have also endorsed the letter and signed the petition.

The DSM-5 Task Force responded to the Open Letter, but the SHP committee was not satisfied with explanations offered by the Task Force. Thus, the committee has written a response (see below and attached). The letter (goo.gl/gusMy) explains why the response of the task force was not adequate, reiterates the potential dangers of the DSM-5, and requests that the DSM-5 proposals be submitted for independent review by scholars and scientists not selected by, nor affiliated with, the DSM-5 Task Force and the American Psychiatric Association which publishes the manual.

The SHP committee hopes that an independent review will result in revisions to the proposed DSM-5 that will more accurately reflect the scientific literature and help ensure that vulnerable populations are not inappropriately diagnosed with mental disorders and treated with psychiatric drugs that have dangerous side effects.

David N. Elkins, President of the Society of Humanistic Psychology and Chair of the Open Letter Committee stated, “If the proposed DSM-5 is not changed, I am concerned that hundreds of thousands of normal individuals – including children and the elderly – will be diagnosed with a mental disorder and inappropriately treated with powerful psychiatric drugs. I hope the leaders of the DSM-5 Task Force listen to our concerns and insist that changes be made. Mental health professionals, who are the major purchasers and users of the DSM, have a right to know that the manual is credible and safe to use.”

LETTER AND LINK TO BLOG: goo.gl/gusMy

CONTACT INFO:
Email: Brent Dean Robbins
Phone: 716-982-8594

Rather than respond in a letter, Darrel Regier, DSM-5 Task Force Chair, was interviewed by journalist, Deborah Brauser,  for Medscape Medical News:

(Free registration is required in order to view this Medscape article.)

Medscape Medical News > Psychiatry

APA Answers DSM-5 Critics

Deborah Brauser | November 9, 2011

 

On November 11, Allen Frances, MD, who had chaired the DSM-IV Task Force, published this commentary on Dr Regier’s responses, as part of series of commentaries on DSM-5:

Psychology Today

DSM5 in Distress

The DSM’s impact on mental health practice and research.

DSM 5- ‘Living Document’ or ‘Dead on Arrival: ‘untested ‘scientific hypotheses’ must be dropped

Allen J. Frances, MD | November 11, 2011

News flash From Medscape Medical News—“APA Answers DSM-5 Critics”—a defense of DSM-5 offered by Darrel A. Regier, MD, vice-chair of the DSM-5 Task Force. Wonderful news that the American Psychiatric Association (APA) is attempting to address the fact that DSM-5 alarms many of its potential users—it is long past time for an open dialog.

Unfortunately, however, Dr Regier dodges the concerns that must be addressed if DSM-5 is to become a safe and credible document. Five simple questions were previously posed to APA with a request for straight answers…

Read on here

 

In his interview for Medscape, Darrell Regier, APA’s director of research and Task Force vice-chair, made some chilling statements. According to Dr Regier:

“Our plan is that these [judgements] will be immediately tested once the DSM is official, and then one will be able to see if revisions can be made…”

“Our workgroups are struggling with this balance…for what might be the most appropriate fix. Some of these fixes are not as well studied as others and we recognize that. But we can’t move forward without some of these put into practice. So we think this is a much more testable set of scientific hypotheses…”

“And that’s what the DSM is — a set of scientific hypotheses that are intended to be tested and disproved if the evidence isn’t found to support them….”

“We’re thinking of having a DSM-5.1, DSM-5.2, etc, in much the same way is done with software updates…”

So come May 2013, the APA plans to publish an unvalidated beta version, as though it were the next release of Firefox, test out its pet theories on vulnerable patients and use children as guinea pigs, then release post publication “patches” to fix a flawed and potentially damaging product.

 

On November 9, Dr Melba T Vasquez, PhD, President, American Psychological Association responded in a letter to the Task Force:

            Response from Melba T Vasquez to DSM-5 Task Force 11.09.11

Updates and media coverage are also being collated under the Coalition for DSM-5 Reform tab page.

CFSAC November Meeting Agenda and Call-in Information

CFSAC November Meeting Agenda and Call-in Information

Post #111 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-1mG

CFSAC Meetings Page: http://www.hhs.gov/advcomcfs/meetings/index.html

CFSAC November meeting Call-in Information

http://www.hhs.gov/advcomcfs/meetings/agendas/cfsac20111108_callininfo.html

CFSAC Fall 2011 Meeting (November 8-9)
Audio Call-In Information

The Meeting of the Chronic Fatigue Advisory Committee will be available via AUDIO Lines. The following call-in information will provide access to the meeting via audio lines:

Please dial the participant dial-in number:
Participant Dial-In Number: (866) 395-4129

Please use the following passcodes for each day:
Passcodes:

Tuesday, November 8: 24756185
Wednesday, November 9: 24759937

Please note, each caller can press *0 at any time during the call tocontact the operator for support.

There will be an operator on the line to welcome you and each caller will be asked their name and email address (this is not a requirement). You will be placed into the conference.

During the lunch hour, callers may hold the line or choose to call back to access the conference.

The CFSAC meeting will begin from 9:00 am – 5:30 pm Tuesday, November 8 and 9:00 am – 4:30 pm on Wednesday, November 9.

November 8-9 2011 Meeting Agenda

http://www.hhs.gov/advcomcfs/meetings/agendas/cfsac20111108_agenda.html

CFSAC Fall 2011 Meeting (November 8-9)

Day One

Agenda – CFSAC Fall 2011 Meeting
November 8, 2011

9:00 am Call to Order
Opening Remarks
Christopher R. Snell Chair, CFSAC

Roll Call, Housekeeping
Nancy C. Lee, M.D., Designated Federal Officer

9:10 am International Classification of Diseases-Clinical Modification (ICD-CM)
Donna Pickett, RHIA, MPH, National Center for Health Statistics

10:00 am Public Comment Public

11:15 am Break

11:30 am Welcome Statement from the Assistant Secretary for Health Howard K. Koh, M.D., Ph.D

12:00 pm Agency Updates: AHRQ, CMS, FDA, HRSA
Ex Officio Members

1:00 pm Subcommittee Lunch Subcommittee Members

2:00 pm Public Comment Public

2:45 pm Break

3:00 pm Future Interdisciplinary Research for CFS Utilizing a Variety of Scientific Disciplines, Gailen Marshall, M.D., Ph.D.
Committee Discussion

4:00 pm Committee Discussion

Past CFSAC Recommendations Committee Members

5:00 pm Adjourn

Day Two

Agenda – CFSAC Fall 2011 Meeting
November 9, 2011

9:00 am Call to Order
Opening Remarks
Christopher R. Snell, Chair, CFSAC

Roll Call, Housekeeping
Nancy C. Lee, M.D., Designated Federal Officer

9:15 am HHS Office on Disability
Rosaly Correa-de-Araujo, M.D, M.Sc., Ph.D, Deputy Director, HHS Office on Disability

10:00 am Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Webpage
Eileen Holderman
Nancy G. Klimas, M.D.
Ermias Belay, M.D.

10:30 am Break

10:45 am Agency Updates: CDC, SSA, NIH
Ex Officio Members

11:45 am Minimal Elements for Papers
Leonard A. Jason, Ph.D.

12:15 pm Subcommittee Lunch
Subcommittee Members

1:15 pm Public Comment
Public

2:15 pm Break

2:30 pm Committee Discussion

Finalize Recommendations Committee Members

4:30 pm Adjourn

[ENDS]

Related information and posts:

1] Coding CFS in ICD-10-CM: CFSAC and the Coalition4ME/CFS initiative: http://wp.me/pKrrB-1hd

2] Minutes of May 10-11 2011 CFSAC meeting (Extract: Discussion of concerns re coding of CFS for ICD-10-CM)

3] A Summary of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Its Classification in the International Classification of Diseases CDC, 2001.

4] CFS orphaned in the “R” codes in US specific ICD-10-CM

5] Forthcoming US “Clinical Modification” ICD-10-CM (starts half way down page)

DSM-5 Task Force Ponders Round 2 of Public Feedback: Deborah Brauser for Medscape Medical News

DSM-5 Task Force Ponders Round 2 of Public Feedback: Deborah Brauser for Medscape Medical News

Post #110 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-1lA

The American Psychiatric Association’s DSM-5 Task Force published no breakdowns for the number of submissions received by each of its 13 Work Groups during the first and second public stakeholder reviews of draft proposals for revision of DSM-IV categories and criteria.

Nor has the Task Force made public lists of names of those professional bodies, organizations and institutions that have submitted feedback.

These stakeholder reviews of draft proposals are not organized as formal consultation processes and few organizations appear to receive any response from the Task Force.

But the British Psychological Society (BPS) did receive a reply to their critical submission, published in June, and the response from Dr Darrel Regier, Vice-Chair of the DSM-5 Task Force, can be read here.

At the end of August, Deborah Brauser, writing for Medscape Medical News, reported on the closure of the second public stakeholder review with quotes from DSM-5 Task Force Chair, David Kupfer, MD, around which DSM categories had received the greatest number of responses during the second review.

Ms Brauser reports:

“According to Dr. Kupfer, the specific diagnostic categories that received the most feedback were sexual and gender identity disorders, followed closely by somatic symptom and anxiety disorders.”

“In addition, the Neurodevelopmental Work Group continued to receive commentary on the issue of autism. But I think it was much, much less than it had received previously. After that, there was a reasonable drop-off in the other groups,” he said.

“Substance abuse and mood disorders received the next highest number of comments, followed by personality disorders.”

On May 4, the Task Force posted revised draft proposals for categories and criteria on its DSM-5 Development website with no prior announcement on the site, itself, and with no news release being issued by the APA. The comment period, which had been scheduled to run only until June 15, was extended by an additional four weeks on the day after it had been due to close.

There were 2120 individual comments in the second public review. 8600 comments were reported to have been received during the first public review, in the Spring of 2010.

A third and final public feedback period is scheduled for early 2012. The full Medscape report can be read here.

 

Medscape Medical News > Psychiatry

DSM-5 Task Force Ponders Round 2 of Public Feedback

New Diagnostic Manual Still on Track for Publication in 2013

by Deborah Brauser | August 31, 2011

Deborah Brauser is a freelance writer for Medscape

August 31, 2011 — The second public feedback period for the upcoming Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5), ended July 15 and has garnered more than 2000 registered comments.

In an interview with Medscape Medical News, David Kupfer, MD, chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s (APA’s) DSM-5 Task Force, said the distribution of comments was “somewhat similar to the first go-round.”

Read full article

Related information

1] DSM-5 Development: http://www.dsm5.org/Pages/Default.aspx

2] DSM-5 Timeline: http://www.dsm5.org/about/Pages/Timeline.aspx

3] “Somatic Symptom Disorders” proposals: http://www.dsm5.org/proposedrevision/Pages/SomaticSymptomDisorders.aspx

4] Published response by the British Psychological Society to the DSM-5 2nd Review of Draft Proposals, June 2011: http://apps.bps.org.uk/_publicationfiles/consultation-responses/DSM-5%202011%20-%20BPS%20response.pdf

5] Response to above from Darrel Regier, MD, Vice-Chair, DSM-5 Task Force, July 2011: http://www.thepsychologist.org.uk/blog/11/blogpost.cfm?threadid=2102&catid=48

Coalition 4 ME/CFS – Letter to the Medical Community

Coalition 4 ME/CFS – Letter to the Medical Community

Post #109 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-1kN

From Mike Munoz, via Co-Cure | October 25, 2011

On July 15, the Coalition 4 ME/CFS submitted a written proposal to the ICD-9-CM Coordination and Maintenance Committee to restore CFS to Chapter 6 “Diseases of the Nervous System” code G93.3 in the ICD-10 Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) in the US.

This action follows the September 2004, August 2005 and May 2011 recommendations of the federally-appointed Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Advisory Committee (CFSAC). In each case, the committee recommended that CFS be in the neurological classification in the ICD-10-CM, in line with the rest of the world.

On September 14, the Coalition 4 ME/CFS made an oral presentation to the committee and responded to concerns expressed by audience members.

The coalition has written a letter to clinicians, researchers and other medical professionals outlining the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) and the coalition option for modification

PDF: Coalition for ME/CFS Letter to the Medical Community

We have also included a sample letter for medical professionals and the public to give input rejecting NCHS’s option #2 in favor of the coalition’s proposal option

Html: Coalition for ME/CFS Sample Letter

We are asking medical professionals to comment on this important issue before the comment period ends on November 18.

Medical professionals wanting to add their signature to the coalition’s prepared letter to NCHS that will be submitted prior to the November 18 deadline can contact Mike Munoz at info@coalition4MECFS.org

More information concerning the coalition and the ICD initiative can be found at

http://coalition4mecfs.org/ICD-Home.html

Website: http://coalition4mecfs.org/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/pages/Coalition-4-ME-CFS/126612960745896

Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/Coalition4MECFS

Contact: info@coalition4MECFS.org

The PDF of the Letter to the Medical Community can also be downloaded from Dx Revision Watch here: Coalition 4 ME/CFS Letter to Medical Community

 

Related material:

Comments on proposals need to be submitted by November 18.

Comments from stakeholders, preferably via email, should be submitted to:

Donna Pickett RHIA, MPH
Medical Classification Administrator
National Center for Health Statistics – CDC
3311Toledo Road Hyattsville, MD 20782
Via email: nchsicd9CM@cdc.gov

You can download an Audio of the September 14 NCHS meeting here:

http://www.cms.gov/ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/Downloads/091411_Meeting_Audio.zip

[Note this is a large Zipped file.  The section for discussions on CFS coding starts at 2 hours 27 minutes in from start and ends at 3 hours 02 minutes.]

 

1] Full NCHS meeting Proposals document:

http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/icd9/TopicpacketforSept2011a.pdf

2] Full NCHS meeting Summary document:

http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/icd9/2011SeptemberSummary.pdf

3] Post: Coding CFS in ICD-10-CM: CFSAC and the Coalition4ME/CFS initiative

4] Post: Extracts: ICD-9-CM Coordination and Maintenance Committee Meeting September 14, 2011 (Coding of CFS in ICD-10-CM)

Media coverage: Open Letter and Petition to DSM-5 Task Force by Society for Humanistic Psychology

Round up 1: Media coverage: Open Letter and Petition to DSM-5 Task Force by Society for Humanistic Psychology

Post #108 Shortlink: http://wp.me/pKrrB-1jZ

An Open Letter and Petition sponsored by a coalition of several Divisions of the American Psychological Association has attracted nearly 7000 signatures since its launch on October 22.

The Petition sponsors are inviting mental health professionals and mental health organizations to sign up in support of an Open Letter to the American Psychiatric Association’s DSM-5 Development Task Force.

The Open Letter, which is highly critical of proposals for the revision of DSM-IV by American Psychiatric Association DSM-5 Work Groups, is sponsored by the Society for Humanistic Psychology (Division 32 of the American Psychological Association) in alliance with the following:

Open Letter and Petition Sponsors

Division of Behavioral Neuroscience and Comparative Psychology (Division 6 of APA)
Division of Developmental Psychology (Division 7 of APA)
Society of Counseling Psychology (Division 17 of APA)
Society for Community Research and Action: Division of Community Psychology (Division 27 of APA)
Division of Psychotherapy (Division 29 of APA)
Society for the Psychology of Women (Division 35 of APA)
Division of Psychoanalysis (Division 39 of APA)
Psychoanalysis for Social Responsibility (Section IX of Division 39 of APA)
Psychologists in Independent Practice (Division 42 of APA)
Society for the Psychological Study of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Issues (Division 44 of APA)
Society for Group Psychology and Psychotherapy (Division 49 of APA)
Society for the Psychological Study of Men & Masculinity (Division 51 of APA)

Association for Counselor Education and Supervision (Division of the American Counseling Association)
Association for Humanistic Counseling (Division of the American Counseling Association)
The Association for Creativity in Counseling (ACC, Division of the American Counseling Association)
The Association for Women in Psychology,
The Association of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Issues in Counseling (ALGBTIC)
Society of Indian Psychologists
National Latina/o Psychological Association
The Society for Personality Assessment,
The Society for Descriptive Psychology,
The UK Council for Psychotherapy (UKCP),
The Constructivist Psychology Network (CPN),
The Taos Institute
Psychoanalysis for Social Responsibility (Section IX of Division 39 of APA)

[See Coalition for DSM-5 Reform website for most recent list of official endorsers.]

For a copy of the coalition’s letter see previous Post #97 or go here iPetitions DSM-5

Media coverage is being collated below as it comes to my attention.

  

Media coverage

[See Coalition for DSM-5 Reform Tab page on Dx Revision Watch website for most recent media coverage.]

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Newsworks

Expanding catalog of mental disorders worries some

Maiken Scott | November 16, 2011

The so-called bible of psychiatry, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, is getting a make-over. The latest version, DSM 5, will come out in 2013. In the meantime, conflicts over which diagnoses should be added, removed or changed are heating up.

Thousands of mental health professionals who are not happy with the direction of the new DSM are signing an online petition…

Read full article

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Irish Medical Times

Pat Kelly is Web Editor and Sub Editor at Irish Medical Times

DSM-V revisions may ‘stigmatise eccentric people’

Pat Kelly | November 15, 2011

Read full article

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American Counseling Association

ACA blogs, written by counselors, for counselors

Paul R. Peluso is a counselor and Associate Professor in the Department of Counselor Education at Florida Atlantic University

A Letter to my Colleagues on the DSM-5

Paul Peluso | November 15, 2011

When I read the response to the criticisms offered by Dr. Darrel A. Regier, vice-chair of the DSM-5 task force that the DSM is “a set of scientific hypotheses that are intended to be tested” I became deeply concerned. My first thought was: “When I go to my physician, I don’t want her to have a hypothesized diagnosis that she is going to test on me, I want her to know what is wrong and how to fix it!” And while Dr. Regier’s comment (and a subsequent one that he “hoped” that there would be regular updates to DSM 5, like software) might have been meant to ameliorate the criticism against DSM-5, the reality is that once it is published they will go from being “editable hypotheses” to “diagnostic canon” that insurance companies, government agencies, and courts will all hold clinicians to (to say nothing of the pharmaceutical industry), which will have serious consequences for the entire field. The problem is that the process and its proposed remedy fails to take into consideration the criticisms against it: namely, that it has been based on VERY shaky science (if any at all).

This should concern us all.

Read full commentary

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Russell Friedman is Executive Director of The Grief Recovery Institute, and co-author of The Grief Recovery Handbook, When Children Grieve, and Moving On.

Psychology Today

Broken Hearts

Exploring myths and truths about grief, loss, and recovery.
by Russell Friedman

Speaking out on behalf of millions of unsuspecting grievers

From Travesty to Potential Tragedy

Russell Friedman | November 4, 2011

The intent of this blog post is to encourage you to read and sign a petition titled, Open Letter to the DSM-5. We are particularly focused on the proposed change in the bereavement exclusion which is one of the major protests in the petition. You can skip the blog and go directly to the petition: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/dsm5/

The Dangerous DSM-5 Bereavement Exclusion Train Must Be Derailed BEFORE It Causes Permanent Harm To Unsuspecting Grievers

We are: John W. James and Russell Friedman, co-founders of The Grief Recovery Institute Educational Foundation, and co-creators of The Grief Recovery Method®. We are also co-authors of The Grief Recovery Handbook and When Children Grieve [both published by HarperCollins] and Moving On [M. Evans].

Read full commentary

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Labor Related blog

David Foley’s Labor and Employment Law Blog

Furor Over DSM-V

David Foley | November 12, 2011

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DSM5 in Distress

The DSM’s impact on mental health practice and research.

DSM 5- ‘Living Document’ or ‘Dead on Arrival: ‘untested ‘scientific hypotheses’ must be dropped

Allen J. Frances, MD | November 11, 2011

News flash From Medscape Medical News—“APA Answers DSM-5 Critics”—a defense of DSM-5 offered by Darrel A. Regier, MD, vice-chair of the DSM-5 Task Force. Wonderful news that the American Psychiatric Association (APA) is attempting to address the fact that DSM-5 alarms many of its potential users—it is long past time for an open dialog.

Unfortunately, however, Dr Regier dodges the concerns that must be addressed if DSM-5 is to become a safe and credible document. Five simple questions were previously posed to APA with a request for straight answers…

Read full commentary

also at

Psychiatric Times

(Registration for Psychiatric Times site required)

DSM-5: Living Document or Dead on Arrival

Allen J. Frances, MD | November 11, 2011

Read full commentary   

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DSM5 in Distress

The DSM’s impact on mental health practice and research.

The User’s Revolt Against DSM 5
will it work?

Allen J. Frances, MD | November 10, 2011

When it comes to DSM 5, experience has proven conclusively that the American Psychiatric Association (APA) will not attend to the science, evaluate the risks, or listen to reason. A user’s revolt has become the last and only hope for derailing the worst of the DSM 5 suggestions…

…Will the petition work?

Read full commentary

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USA Today

Psychologists challenge proposed new diagnoses in DSM-5

Rita Rubin, Special for USA TODAY | November 10, 2011

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Forbes

The New Mental Health Disorders Manual Is Driving Psychologists Nuts

Forbes | November 10, 2011

The new manual of mental disorders coins bizarre new psychological disorders, lowers the threshold for diagnosing old ones, and has some critics pulling their hair out…

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Psychology Today

DSM-5 in Distress

APA Responds Lamely to the Petition to Reform DSM 5
How about straight answers to simple questions?

Allen J. Frances, MD | November 8, 2011

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Registration is required in order to view Medscape article

Medscape Medical News > Psychiatry

APA Answers DSM-5 Critics

Deborah Brauser | November 9, 2011

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Before you take that pill

New Questionable Diagnoses on the Horizon from the DSM-5 Committee

Doug Bremner | November 8, 2011

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The Great DSM-5 Personality Bazaar

James Phillips, MD | November 7, 2011

Evaluating the evaluation

There is something quite elegant about the DSM-5 Personality Disorders diagnostic system—an architectonic of divisions, subdivisions, and sub-subdivisions. On the other hand, for all their scholastic erudition, the work group have created a monster—a bloated, pedantic, cumbersome diagnostic instrument that will never be used by anyone working in the hurly-burly of clinical practice. Just imagine doing a routine new-patient evaluation and trying to include the personality disorder assessment, each of the first two criteria with its many-item scale, each item to be scored on a 4- or 5-point rating system. It’s hard to imagine anyone having the patience or motivation to use this instrument.”

Read full article

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Registration is required in order to view Medscape article

Medscape Medical News > Psychiatry

Petition Calls for Critical Changes to Upcoming DSM-5

Group Says It Has ‘Serious Reservations’ About Lowering Diagnostic Thresholds

Deborah Brauser | November 4, 2011

November 4, 2011 — Divisions of the American Psychological Association have created an online petition addressing “serious reservations” about the upcoming Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th Edition (DSM-5). Launched October 22, the petition has already garnered more than 3000 signatures from mental health professionals, students, and organizations.

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Psychology Today

DSM-5 in Distress

The DSM’s impact on mental health practice and research.

Why Psychiatrists Should Sign the Petition to Reform DSM 5 the fight for the future of psychiatry

Allen J. Frances, MD | November 4, 2011

Psychiatrists may be more reluctant than are other mental health clinicians to sign a petition questioning the safety and value of DSM 5. After all, it is the American Psychiatric Association that is sponsoring DSM 5 and there is a natural tendency to want to trust the wisdom of one’s own Association. We also tend to feel the greatest loyalty to our profession when it seems to be under sharp attack from without.

All this is completely understandable to me. I have not felt the least bit comfortable assuming the role fate assigned me as critic of DSM 5 and of the APA. It was a case of responsibility calling and my feeling compelled to answer. If DSM 5 were not proposing some really dangerous changes, I would have stayed comfortably on the sidelines. But I think DSM 5 is too risky to ignore and that all psychiatrists should feel the same call that I did to restrain it before it is too late.

Read full commentary

also on Psychiatric Times (Registration for Psychiatric Times site required)

Why Psychiatrists Should Sign the Petition to Reform DSM 5

Allen J. Frances, MD | November 4, 2011

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More from Allen J Frances, MD

DSM5 in Distress

The DSM’s impact on mental health practice and research.

by Allen Frances, M.D.

Why Doesn’t DSM 5 Defend Itself?

Perhaps because no defense is possible

Allen J. Frances, MD | November 3, 2011

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Nature.com

Nature News

Mental-health guide accused of overreach

Dispute grows over revisions to diagnostic handbook.

Heidi Ledford | Published online November, 2 2011

Nature 479, 14 (2011) | doi:10.1038/479014a

Corrected online: 3 November 2011

Psychologist David Elkins had modest ambitions for his petition. He and his colleagues were worried that proposed changes to an influential handbook of mental disorders could classify normal behaviours as psychological conditions, potentially leading to inappropriate treatments. So they laid out their concerns in an open letter, co-sponsored by five divisions of the American Psychological Association in Washington DC. “I thought, ‘Well, maybe we’ll get a couple or maybe 30 signatures’,” says Elkins, an emeritus professor at Pepperdine University in Malibu, California.

But the letter, posted online on 22 October (http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/dsm5/), touched a nerve. Within 10 days more than 2,800 people had signed it, many identifying themselves as mental-health professionals…

Read full article

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Psychology Today Do the Right Thing

Thomas Plante, Ph.D., ABPP, is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Spirituality and Health Institute at Santa Clara University

All the Fuss with DSM-5: The Ethics of the Psychiatric Bible Is DSM5 sacred scripture?

Thomas G. Plante, Ph.D | November 1, 2011

There has been a great deal of controversy already about DSM5 and it isn’t scheduled to be published until May 2013! So, what’s up with that?

You may have heard of some of the controversy surrounding the new edition of the DSM, the “psychiatric bible,” published periodically by the American Psychiatric Association. It is the “go to” document that defines all mental health disorders and is used for diagnosis, treatment approaches, and perhaps most especially, for insurance coverage and reimbursement for professional psychiatric services. If you are a mental health professional or a patient of a mental health professional, this is an important document…

Read full commentary

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A sixth commentary from Allen J Frances 

(Registration for Psychiatric Times site required)

Psychiatric Times

DSM-5 Will Not Be Credible Without An Independent Scientific Review

Allen J Frances, MD | November 2, 2011

After all this controversy and opposition, there is one thing (and one thing only) that will save the credibility of DSM-5 and guarantee its safety – a credible process of external scientific review. APA is conducting its own internal scientific review, but it strikes out badly on all 4 requirements that must be met before a review deserves to be taken seriously as a trustworthy stamp of approval…

Read full text

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A fifth commentary from Allen J Frances 

Psychology Today

Blogs

DSM5 in Distress

The DSM’s impact on mental health practice and research.

Dr Frances was Chair of the DSM-IV Task Force and is Professor Emeritus of the Department of Psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine

DSM 5 Against Everyone Else Its Research Types Just Don’t Understand The Clinical World

Allen J Frances, MD | DSM5 in Distress | November 1, 2011

also at

Psychiatric Times

(Registration for Psychiatric Times site required)

DSM-5 Against Everyone Else: Research Types Just Don’t Understand The Clinical World

Allen J Frances, MD  | November 1, 2011

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Psychology Today

Blogs

Side Effects

From quirky to serious, trends in psychology and psychiatry.

by Christopher Lane, Ph.D.

Saving Psychiatry from Itself: The DSM-5 Controversy Heats Up Again

Why an Open Letter to the DSM-5 task force is generating widespread interest

Christopher Lane, PhD | October 31, 2011

Last weekend, without any fanfare or publicity, the Society for Humanistic Psychology, a division of the American Psychological Association, posted an open letter to the DSM-5 task force listing in precise, scholarly detail its many concerns about the edition’s working assumptions, procedures, and recommendations. Three other APA Divisions supported the move, which also was endorsed by the Association for Women in Psychology, the Society for Descriptive Psychology, and the UK Council for Psychotherapy (UKCP).

In the space of just a week, the open letter has caught fire…

Read full commentary

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A fourth commentary from Allen J Frances 

Dr Frances was Chair of the DSM-IV Task Force and is Professor Emeritus of the Department of Psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine

Psychology Today

What Would A Useful DSM 5 Look Like? And An Update On The Petition Drive

Allen J Frances, MD | DSM5 in Distress | October 31, 2011

The petition to reform DSM 5 continues to gain momentum. After just one week, more than 2000 people have expressed their disapproval of the DSM 5 proposals and their desire to see dramatic changes. You can join them at http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/dsm5/.

Read full commentary

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The Constructivist Psychology Network | October 30, 2011

CPN Supports DSM-5 Petition 

The Constructivist Psychology Network has signed a petition supporting an open letter by psychologists to the DSM-5 task force. The open letter objects to many of the proposed revisions being considered by the for inclusion in its forthcoming DSM-5.

Read full statement

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Psychology Today

Rethinking Depression

How to shed mental health labels and create personal meaning

by Eric Maisel, Ph.D. | October 28, 2011

The DSM-5 Controversy

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The UK Council for Psychotherapy (UKCP)

UKCP signs an online petition about DSM-5 | October 26, 2011

UKCP has signed an online petition which expresses serious reservations about the proposed content of the future DSM-5. In the latest issue of The Psychotherapist (issue 49, autumn 2011), Tom Warnecke explains the controversy surrounding the forthcoming fifth edition of the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders)…

Read full text

PDF The Psychotherapist (issue 49, autumn 2011) , Page 24, Mass psychosis or the brave new world of DSM-5: Tom Warnecke

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A second blog from Karen Franklin

Forensic Psychologist

Karen Franklin Ph.D. | October 27, 2011

DSM-5 petition takes off like wildfire

Karen Franklin, Ph.D. is a forensic psychologist and adjunct professor at Alliant University in Northern California.

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A second commentary  from Allen J Frances 

Psychiatric Times

DSM-5 Blog

Petition Against DSM-5 Gets Off To Racing Start: A Game Changer?

By Allen J Frances, MD | October 26, 2011

Dr Frances was Chair of the DSM-IV Task Force and is Professor Emeritus of the Department of Psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine

(Registration for Psychiatric Times site required)

also at Psychology Today | October 27, 2011

The Petition Against DSM 5 Gets Off To Fast Start

Could It Be A Game Changer

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Counseling Today

Psychologists circulate petition against DSM-5 revisions

CT Daily | October 24, 2011

Heather Rudow

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Britsh Psychological Society (BPS)

Psychologists petition against DSM-5 | October 25, 2011

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Psychology Today

DSM-5 in Distress

Dr Allen Frances

Psychologists Petition Against DSM-5: Users Revolt Should Capture APA Attention

By Allen J Frances, MD | October 24, 2011

Dr Frances was Chair of the DSM-IV Task Force and is Professor Emeritus of the Department of Psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine

also (with registered access) same text at Psychiatric Times 

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Forensic Psychologist

Karen Franklin, Ph.D. | October 23, 2011

Psychology coalition urges rethinking of DSM-5 expansions

Karen Franklin, Ph.D. is a forensic psychologist and adjunct professor at Alliant University in Northern California.

Dr Franklin also blogs at Psychology Today Witness, A blog about forensic psychology