'Condition' may be included in new edition of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, the industry bible

Childhood temper tantrums, teenage irritability and binge eating may
soon rate as psychiatric disorders in the US, according to proposed
changes to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, the bible of the psychiatric profession.


The proposals are the product of a 10-year effort to update the
handbook, which influences the vast network of American healthcare
providers, insurance companies, courts, prisons and universities. At
stake are billions of dollars in insurance payments, pharmaceutical
sales and medical fees. The proposed revisions, published online today
, will be subject to public comment until late April.


"It not only determines how mental disorders are diagnosed, it can impact how people see themselves and how we see each other," Alan
Schatzberg, president of the American Psychiatric Association, which
publishes the guide, told reporters. "It influences how research is
conducted as well as what is researched. It affects legal matters,
industry and government programmes."

The DSM is in its fourth edition. It has been criticised for formalising character traits and emotions into mental
conditions and for encouraging their medical treatment, often with
drugs that have powerful side effects.


Christopher Lane, a professor at Northwestern University and author of 2007 DSM, critique Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness,
said: "The organisation is clearly opening another Pandora's box here,
as well as paving the way for the medication of even-greater numbers of
children and teenagers cycling through emotional stages as part of
normal development."


In an email, Lane said that categorising binge eating as a psychiatric disorder risks classifying millions of Americans as
mentally ill at a time when the country is trying to rein in health
care costs.


Among the proposals is a new condition, "temper dysregulation with dysphoria", characterised by "severe, recurrent outbursts of
temper" several times a week, that are "grossly out of proportion to
the situation or provocation and that interfere significantly with
functioning". To be considered, the "symptoms" must have been
"diagnosed" before age 10.


The proposed revisions would also recognise binge eating as a disorder. The condition is "characterised by recurring episodes of the
consumption of unusually large amounts of food, accompanied by a sense
of loss of control and strong feelings of embarrassment and guilt".
These episodes would need to occur at least once a week over the last
three months, and the writers were keen to distinguish it from mere
overeating.


"While overeating is a challenge for many Americans, recurrent binge eating is much less common and far more severe and is associated
with significant physical and psychological problems," wrote Dr B
Timothy Walsh.


The panels proposed a new category of condition called "risk syndromes", in which a patient is at risk for a mental disorder that is
not yet present.


For example, a moody teenager who displays "excessive suspicion, delusions and disorganised speech or behaviour" may be
labelled as having psychosis risk syndrome. The panel estimated that a
quarter to a third of people who suffer from those "symptoms" go on to
develop a psychotic disorder, and the writers acknowledged the new
category could lead to inaccurate diagnosis of some who are not at
risk.


"Given the severity of psychotic disorders, and evidence that early treatment may mitigate its long-term consequences, we believed
that it was important to begin to recognise these conditions as early
as possible," wrote Dr William Carpenter of the American Psychiatric
Association's psychotic disorders work group.


The panels who proposed the revisions also took into account how race, ethnicity and gender affect the incidence of psychiatric
disorders, and studied how those categories affect the expression of
symptoms. For example, researchers noted differing ways of experiencing
and describing symptoms of panic among some Asian and Hispanic
patients.


The panel also recommended discarding the term "mental retardation" in diagnoses, replacing it with "intellectual disability".

Childrens tantrums.