Since it was first published in 1952, the DSM has been the has been the diagnostic bible for many psychiatrists. Each time the manual is updated, new conditions are introduced, often amid much controversy. DSM 5, the latest edition published on Saturday, is one of the most controversial yet.
Many conditions we’re now familiar with were codified in the DSM, including body dismorphic disorder, schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
Inclusions and removals can be hugely controversial. Autism is in the manual, for example, but Asperger’s isn’t. Homosexuality was only removed in 1974.
Below, five experts explain some of the most noteworthy new additions, and why they’ve been included.
Top Comments
And yet sensory processing disorder still isn't included. Sigh.
SPD is a neurological condition, not a psychiatric one.
My understanding is that although SPD is neurological, because it effects brain function it is therefore psychiatric also. Autism is neurological also and included in the DSM, along with other neurological conditions. I am on a learning journey here, so would love to know if I've got this wrong. I have always been told by professionals that funding for SPD was limited due to not being listed on the DSM, and have never been able to understand why.
Skin Picking Disorder (SPD) is also known as Dermatillomania, Excoriation Disorder and Compulsive Skin Picking (CSP). The origin of Dermatillomania is Greek: Derma = skin, Till = pull, Mania = madness.
The disorder is related to trichotillomania (compulsive pulling out of the hair), and mostly is strongly linked to anxiety. Various theories about skin picking range from biological to neurological to environmental (i.e. upbringing, stress etc):
* it’s a way for a person to cope with intense anxiety and stress.
* another hypothesis explains that it is a way of repressing a person’s rage against authoritarian and / or overbearing parents who might be perceived as expecting absolute obedience from that person.
* according to recent studies on pathological skin picking, excessive amounts of dopamine in the body or intake of drugs that further increase the amount of dopamine may lead to that impulse of picking at the skin.
* other studies, show that people with dermatillomania have decreased motor-inhibitory control compared to those who do not have the disorder; some brain pathways responsible for controlling movement and behaviour in pathological skin pickers may be affected.