The Post reports
psychiatrists "hope that creating a new disease category would encourage
systematic study, drug trials and insurance coverage." Indeed, creating new
"disease" categories demonstrates psychiatry's penchant for creating an economic
niche for itself by declaring the human condition and its various
manifestations--pathology.
Dr. Robert Spitzer, a
previous editor of psychiatry's diagnostic manual worries that the new category
would give fresh ammunition to critics of psychiatry, such as the Church of
Scientology. But the Church of Scientology is hardly psychiatry's most
formidable challenge. Psychiatry is in trouble because its commercially
lucrative, but hazardous "remedies" have caused more anguish and harm to those
it has ministered than it has helped.
Dr. Nathaniel Lehrman is a psychiatrist who has been critical of the profession
for creating disorders replete with manufactured biological underpinnings,
recently wrote on redflagsweeksly.com: "One of the myths of our time is that
"depression," "anxiety," and the hundreds of other disorders listed in the
American Psychiatric Association’s manual, represent separate entities, and that
their differences may even involve different biological processes."
http://www.redflagsweekly.com/Thursday_report/2002_august15.html
Dr. Paul McHugh, former
chairman of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University, seems to agree: "You can't
reduce everything to the idea that there is a brain flaw in every troubled
situation," he said. "Perfectly normal people make mistakes in arithmetic. You
don't look for problems in their brains, you look for problems in their
arithmetic."
*[Loren Mosher is a board member of AHRP]

Dear All
Below is the article published in the Washington Post on September 1, 2002 about
the shrinks targeting family relationships. This longer article is worthy of
your attention because of the following statement and many more:
"You can take road rage as a relational disorder. It's a relationship between
the person and traffic," said Bedirhan Ustun, a doctor with the World Health
Organization. Robert Spitzer, a previous editor of the manual, said the new
category would give fresh ammunition to critics of psychiatry, such as the
Church of Scientology."
This paragraph (#10) as well as paragraphs 11, 12, and 16 thru 26 have been
deleted from the article as it was published in the St. Paul Pioneer Press.
Cleansing of newscopy is a common practice in fascist Minnesota, a NAMI PACT
state.
Please compare and contrast these two versions of the story and you will see for
yourself the kind of biased journalism that goes on Minnesota. (By the way, the
Minneapolis Star Tribune was caught cleansing articles from the New York Times
earlier this year when they eliminated any references to behavior by Israel that
some people consider terrorist.)
I will be contacting the publishers of both papers tomorrow to find out what
their respective policies are on the reuse of copyrighted material.
Jerri Lynn
Social Justice/NOFORCE (unpaid) Activist

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A21469-2002Aug31.html
Washington Post
Doctors Consider Diagnosis for 'Ill' Relationships
By Shankar Vedantam
Sunday, September 1, 2002; Page A01
Some of the nation's top psychiatrists are advocating the creation of an
entirely new category of mental illness that could profoundly alter the practice
of psychiatry and result in tens of thousands of families being diagnosed with a
psychiatric disorder.
In a monograph being circulated by the American Psychiatric Association (APA),
the doctors recommend that a category called "Relational Disorders" be added to
the next edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM), which is the
psychiatric profession's official guide for defining emotional and mental
illnesses.
Unlike every psychiatric diagnosis so far, this new type of disorder would
identify sickness in groups of individuals and in the relationships between
them. This is a profound conceptual shift from the medical model of psychiatry,
in which illnesses are diagnosed solely in individuals.
In the proposed class of illness, an individual might be diagnosed as healthy
except when it comes to certain relationships. For the moment, the new category
of mental illness would apply only to family relationships. If the new category
is created, couples who constantly quarrel and parents and children who clash
could be diagnosed with mental illness and treated, possibly with drugs.
Troubled relationships between siblings could be the next large group.
Doctors hope that creating a new disease category would encourage systematic
study, drug trials and insurance coverage.
The move, however, is already provoking controversy and opposition inside and
outside psychiatry, as doctors and society grapple with whether such troubled
relationships are social problems or medical ailments.
Psychiatrists have long been interested in such relationships, because they
often lead to marital and child abuse as well as depression. But so far, doctors
have not sought to label the relationships, themselves, as pathological.
The psychiatrists calling for the creation of a "Relational Disorders" category
are led by Michael First of Columbia University, editor of the previous edition
of the psychiatry manual, and David Reiss of George Washington University. They
and others say that troubled relationships are the reason many people seek
psychiatric help and that improving those relationships can lift people out of
depression, improve cardiac and immune system functioning and even heal wounds
faster.
First and Weiss face major hurdles. Several psychiatrists oppose the move,
portending a clash that could last for months or years -- doctors are still in
the early planning stages for the next edition of the manual. Some worry that
the new category of disorders would fuel fears that psychiatrists are inventing
disorders as a backdoor way to fix social problems.
When talk of the new category was begun by First at a recent meeting of the APA
in Philadelphia, the psychiatrist said that troubled family relationships were
his only targets for treatment. But other doctors warned that the category could
be quickly expanded. What about troubled relationships between managers and
employees, or even troubled relationships between individuals and the state? One
psychiatrist at another session dubbed terrorism an example not of individual
pathology, but of "social pathology."
"You can take road rage
as a relational disorder. It's a relationship between the person and traffic,"
said Bedirhan Ustun, a doctor with the World Health Organization. Robert
Spitzer, a previous editor of the manual, said the new category would give fresh
ammunition to critics of psychiatry, such as the Church of Scientology.
"There are Scientologists on the street making fun of our diagnoses," he told
First, referring to critics outside the meeting halls who spun a roulette wheel
to offer passersby a psychiatric diagnosis. "It's one thing to call something a
problem. But to call it a disorder is to move away from the medical model."
The medical model is the direction Spitzer and other psychiatrists took more
than a quarter-century ago to move their field from Freudian insight and
analysis toward a classification similar to other medical specialties, with
mental illnesses linked to brain disorders. Although some aspects of treatment
under the medical model include the use of talk therapy techniques, the major
thrust of modern psychiatric research and practice has been medicines such as
Prozac that change brain chemistry.
Relational disorders could upset the medical model by diagnosing relationships,
instead of individuals or individual brain chemistry, as sick. First and Reiss
argue that whether the new classification fits the model is less important than
whether it can help people.
"People in Dr. Spitzer's generation are very concerned that all the other
branches of medicine are going to laugh at us," Reiss said. "That's not an issue
anymore in psychiatry. Everybody understands that we treat real disorders and we
know how to diagnose and treat them. One mark of our maturity is that we're
going to recognize the disorders as they appear clinically, and we are not going
to worry about whether some conservative view of the medical model will make us
a laughingstock or not."
Treating marital and child abuse has long required that clinicians look at
relationships, Reiss and First said in interviews. Spouses who violently clash
with each other can divorce and go on to have perfectly normal relationships
with other people. Similarly, a parent may have a normal relationship with one
child but an abusive relationship with another.
"If you look at a person in isolation, you see nothing -- something only happens
in the interaction," First said. "That makes the disorder in the relationship. .
. . It's the way two people interact that creates the fire, the explosion."
Family therapists have always worked on relationships to help individuals with
psychiatric diagnoses.
"Most of us believe the effects go both ways," said Steven Beach, a psychologist
at the University of Georgia and an expert on marital discord and therapy. "If
you are depressed, it creates a strain on relationships, and if you are having a
lot of difficulties in relationships, it places a strain on you personally and
increases your depression."
Beach cited a study that showed that improving couples' relationships was just
as effective as treating individuals; both techniques lifted people out of
depression.
As for Spitzer's concern about moving psychiatry away from the medical model,
Beach said that most family therapy experts he knew "would cheer if we could de-medicalize
the DSM. Psychologists [who are not medical doctors] often think the disorders
have been too medicalized."
He said that he believed there were "genetic underpinnings" to relationship
troubles and that if the new category was created, doctors would find that "they
are every bit as medical as everything in the DSM."
Others remain unconvinced. Steven E. Hyman, former director of the National
Institute of Mental Health and now provost at Harvard University, said
relational disorders should not be included in the psychiatry manual.
"A better way to think about child and spouse abuse -- if they should be
medicalized at all, and that is an open question -- is to recognize that the
_expression of psychiatric symptoms can be context dependent," he wrote in an
e-mail from Australia. Some psychiatric symptoms can be elicited by outside cues
-- including other people -- much like people with allergies sneeze in the
presence of pollen, he explained.
Trying to find the neural and genetic underpinnings of relationship problems to
make the category fit the medical model of psychiatry is misguided, added Paul
McHugh, former chairman of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University.
"You can't reduce everything to the idea that there is a brain flaw in every
troubled situation," he said. "Perfectly normal people make mistakes in
arithmetic. You don't look for problems in their brains, you look for problems
in their arithmetic."
© 2002 The Washington Post Company