Book contents
- Making Sense of the ICD-11
- Making Sense of the ICD-11
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Development and Innovation in the ICD-11 Chapter on Mental, Behavioural and Neurodevelopmental Disorders
- Chapter 2 ICD-11 + DSM-5 = A Diagnostic Babel
- Chapter 3 Schizophrenia or Other Primary Psychotic Disorders
- Chapter 4 Mood Disorders
- Chapter 5 Disorders Specifically Associated with Stress
- Chapter 6 Disorders Due to Substance Use
- Chapter 7 Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Disorders
- Chapter 8 Anxiety and Fear-Related Disorders and Obsessive–Compulsive and Related Disorders
- Chapter 9 Personality Disorders
- Chapter 10 Disorders of Intellectual Development
- Chapter 11 Eating Disorders
- Chapter 12 Mental Health Classifications in Primary Care
- Index
Chapter 2 - ICD-11 + DSM-5 = A Diagnostic Babel
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 October 2023
- Making Sense of the ICD-11
- Making Sense of the ICD-11
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Development and Innovation in the ICD-11 Chapter on Mental, Behavioural and Neurodevelopmental Disorders
- Chapter 2 ICD-11 + DSM-5 = A Diagnostic Babel
- Chapter 3 Schizophrenia or Other Primary Psychotic Disorders
- Chapter 4 Mood Disorders
- Chapter 5 Disorders Specifically Associated with Stress
- Chapter 6 Disorders Due to Substance Use
- Chapter 7 Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Disorders
- Chapter 8 Anxiety and Fear-Related Disorders and Obsessive–Compulsive and Related Disorders
- Chapter 9 Personality Disorders
- Chapter 10 Disorders of Intellectual Development
- Chapter 11 Eating Disorders
- Chapter 12 Mental Health Classifications in Primary Care
- Index
Summary
The ICD and DSM are both useful systems of psychiatric diagnosis, alike enough to be roughly comparable, but different enough to cause confusion and misuse. Both systems are in wide use around the world and are likely to remain so. Neither system is clearly better than the other – we would be much better off having either one, rather than both.
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- Making Sense of the ICD-11For Mental Health Professionals, pp. 17 - 24Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023