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Holed up in windowless hotel conference rooms near Washington, D.C., scientists have been busy rewriting the bible of American mental illness.

Details.
 
Posts: 7860 | Location: Georgetown, Texas | Registered: January 25, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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See below...a comment in support of JB's post...

flj
> From: Ken Pope [mailto:ken@kenpope.com <mailto:ken@kenpope.com> ] > Sent: October-31-12 6:49 PM > To: Ken Pope > Subject: Highly Recommended: Allen Frances: "DSM-5 Field Trials Discredit APA"
>
> Today's *Huffington Post* includes an article: "DSM-5 Field Trials Discredit the American Psychiatric Association."
>
> The authors is Allen Frances.
>
> The author note states: "Allen Frances is a professor emeritus at Duke University and was the chairman of the DSM-IV task force."
>
> Here are some excerpts:
>
> [begin excerpts]
>
> The $3 million DSM-5 Field Trials have been a pure disaster from start to finish.
>
> First, there was the poor choice of design.
>
> The study restricted itself to reliability -- the measurement of diagnostic agreement among different raters.
>
> Unaccountably, it failed to address two much more crucial questions -- DSM-5's potential impact on who would be diagnosed and on how much its dramatic lowering of diagnostic thresholds would increase the rates of mental disorder in the general population.
>
> There was no possible excuse for not asking these simple-to-answer and vitally important questions.
>
> We have a right to know how much DSM-5 will contribute to the already rampant diagnostic inflation in psychiatry, especially since this risks even greater overuse of psychotropic drugs.
>
> Second problem -- the design of the DSM-5 field trial had a byzantine complexity that could be dreamed up only by people with no experience in real-life field testing.
>
> One look made clear that there would be serious implementation problems and that it would be impossible to complete within the time allotted.
>
> The first stage of the field trial limped in eighteen months late, having taken twice as long as was scheduled.
>
> APA then had to choose between delaying the publication of DSM-5 or canceling its planned second stage of field testing that was meant to provide for desperately needed quality control.
>
> APA decided to cancel the trial and instead is rushing ahead with the premature publication of DSM-5 next May -- publishing profits clearly trumped concern for the quality and integrity of the product.
>
> <snip>
>
> Now, we have strike three.
>
> The DSM-5 leadership has reported the results of its field trial in a distressingly misleading paper.
>
> According to the authors, 14 of the 23 disorders had "very good" or "good" reliability; six had questionable, but "acceptable" levels; and just three had "unacceptable" rates.
>
> Sounds okay until you look at the actual data and discover that the cheerful words used by the DSM-5 leaders simply don't fit their extremely disappointing results.
>
> The paper is a classic example of Orwellian "newspeak."
>
> When DSM-5 failed to achieve acceptable reliability by historical standards, the DSM-5 leadership arbitrarily decided to move the goal posts in and lower the bar in defining what is "acceptable."
>
> In fact, only the five of the 23 DSM-5 diagnoses that achieved kappa levels of agreement between 0.60-0.79 would have been considered "good" in the past.
>
> <snip>
>
> Then it gets much worse.
>
> The nine DSM-5 disorders in the kappa range of 0.40-0.59 previously would have been considered just plain poor, but DSM-5 puffs these up as "good."
>
> Then DSM-5 has the chutzpah to call acceptable the six disorders that achieved lousy, absolutely unacceptable reliabilities with kappas of 0.20-0.39.
>
> <snip>
>
> Major Depressive Disorder and Generalized Anxiety Disorder were among those that achieved the unacceptable kappas in 0.20-0.39 range.
>
> This makes sense for GAD because its DSM-5 definition was so very poorly done.
>
> But how to explain the ridiculously low levels of agreement for MDD. DSM-5 had made no changes from the MDD definition whose reliability has been studied hundreds of times in the past 30 years and has always achieved rates about twice as high.
>
> The only possible explanation for the egregiously poor MDD result is amateur incompetence in how the DSM-5 field trials were conducted -- and this throws in doubt all of the other results (and all of DSM-5).
>
> It is sad that the American Journal of Psychiatry agreed to publish this sleight of hand interpretation of the remarkably poor DSM-5 field trial results.
>
> Clearly, AJP has been forced into the role of a cheerleading house organ, not an independent scientific journal.
>
> <snip>
>
> Scientific journals all have some inherent conflicts of interest -- but this is ridiculous.
>
> The DSM-5 field trial fiasco and its attempted cover-up is more proof (if any were needed) that APA has lost its competence and credibility as custodian for DSM.
>
> [end excerpts]
>
> The article is online at:
> <http://bit.ly/KenPopeAllenFrancesDSMFieldTrials>
>
 
Posts: 264 | Location: Houston, TX | Registered: January 17, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Should make for good impeachment during trials.
 
Posts: 7860 | Location: Georgetown, Texas | Registered: January 25, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Yup.
 
Posts: 264 | Location: Houston, TX | Registered: January 17, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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