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Psychiatric overdiagnosis means "normal" could become obsolete

An intolerance of individual differences, according to some, has led to overdiagnosis.
An intolerance of individual differences, according to some, has led to overdiagnosis.
Credits: 
Joe Shlabotnik

Are you normal? Are you sure?

A growing number of behaviors and moods are being relabeled as mental disorders, according to two recent articles. Sadness, shyness, personality quirks and the ups and downs of everyday life may qualify almost anyone for a psychiatric diagnosis, effectively pathologizing normality.

Allen Francis, MD writes in the Psychiatric Times that almost everyone meets the criteria for one or another of the conditions listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the book psychiatrists use to determine whether you have a mental illness. The fifth edition of the manual (DSM-5), due in 2013, will relax these criteria even further, giving psychiatric labels to even more people.

According to 2010 figures from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), more than 25 percent of the adult population has a diagnosable mental disorder. That’s approximately 60 million people. A prospective study found that, by age 32, half of U.S. adults could be diagnosed with anxiety; 40 percent with depression; and 30 percent with alcohol abuse or dependence.

With criteria proposed for the DSM-5, psychiatrists could diagnose “Nicotine Use Disorder” or “Caffeine-Induced Sleep Disorder.” If your child has temper tantrums, that’s one of the signs of “Temper Dysregulation Disorder with Dysphoria.” Bad dreams? It could be a case of “Nightmare Disorder.”

Why is this a problem? Mental illness carries a stigma. A diagnostic label can follow you for the rest of your life. It is shared with your insurance company. Your family and friends might make certain assumptions about you. Your doctor may insist you need psychiatric drugs.

More and more behaviors, however, are being stamped as “mental illnesses.”

Francis writes that individual differences that were once accepted as normal have become medicalized. Our society, he says, has become perfectionistic and intolerant of even short-term distress.

Louis Menand, writing in The New Yorker, cites the example of “Social Anxiety Disorder,” a condition that may apply to almost one out of every five U.S. adults. What used to be called “shyness” – a common personality trait – has become a mental disorder to be treated with drugs like Paxil, and researchers have begun trying to find a “shyness gene.”

Menand says depression provides another example. The number of people diagnosed with depression has skyrocketed; in 2008, 164 million prescriptions for antidepressants were written, and sales for the drugs totaled $9.6 billion. But this does not mean that depression is more common, he says; it means that the definition of “depression” has changed to include normal, expectable sadness. If you lose your job, for instance, sadness would be a natural reaction. But now it may be diagnosed as a mental illness and treated with medication.

Think you’re normal? Think again. Normality may be on its way out.

Perhaps crazy is the new sane.

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By

Portland Mental Health Examiner

Jenny Westberg is a Portland writer whose work has appeared in The Oregonian, The Portland Tribune, Blue Stocking, The Skanner, Street Roots,...

Comments

  • ulivillwait 1 year ago
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    To see stars and not see them swirling, to never lament so deeply you must paint it. The bones of Winter, kaleidoscope Spring, lonely, awkward, loosened, insane. Only the brave, the frontiersmen, dare say it; "the normal are the unlucky."

  • Jenny Westberg, Portland Mental Health Examiner 1 year ago
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    Ulivillwait:

    I couldn't have put it any better myself.

    Jenny

  • Denise Maratos, LA Eco-Conscious Health Examiner 1 year ago
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    People just have to understand that 'normal' is a word. How people define or put meaning into the word is what matters. 'NORMAL' is an imperfect human being to me. I don't think anyone is 'perfect'.... thank GOD! bc life would be so boring if we were all the same!

  • L.M. 11 months ago
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    While I may agree that over-prescription and misdiagnosis are serious problems, this article is so specious it should be considered an opinion-piece, and not journalism. Rather than addressing the problem of stigma, Westberg reinforces it, with fear-mongering that many more people could soon be 'stamped with mental illness.' As a teacher I have worked with children with ADD and ODD, and these are kids that are categorically different than those whose minds wander or grow restless after half an hour or concentrating, or have the odd temper tantrum. Mental disorders do exist. Sadly,nderstanding them to remove stigma, and make clearer decisons about the administration of medication is a challenge that this article does little to address.

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