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How Voting and Consensus Created the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III)

Authors :
James Davies
Source :
Anthropology & Medicine. 24:32-46
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2016.

Abstract

This paper examines how Task Force votes were central to the development of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III and DSM-III-R). Data were obtained through a literature review, investigation of DSM archival material housed at the American Psychiatric Association (APA), and interviews with key Task Force members of DSM-III and DSM-III-R. Such data indicate that Task Force votes played a central role in the making of DSM-III, from establishing diagnostic criteria and diagnostic definitions to settling questions about the inclusion or removal of diagnostic categories. The paper concludes that while the APA represented DSM-III, and the return to descriptive psychiatry it inaugurated, as a triumph of empirically based decision-making, the evidence presented here fails to support that view. Since the DSM is a cumulative project, and as DSM-III lives on through subsequent editions, this paper calls for a more socio-historically informed understanding of DSM's construction to be deployed in how the DSM is taught and implemented in training and clinical settings.

Details

ISSN :
14692910 and 13648470
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Anthropology & Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....16366752d0029c9a2ffbcd94ea10ded2