Written to help identify major gaps in our knowledge of how
gender and age affect psychiatric diagnoses and to stimulate
much-needed research to fill these gaps, Age and Gender
Considerations in Psychiatric Diagnosis serves as both a valuable
short-term source for the DSM-V Task Force and its
disorder-specific workgroups, and a long-term guide for future
studies that will contribute to revised psychiatric classifications
in these three areas.
Here, 47 experts present findings in three areas of psychiatric
research that historically have been neglected but rightfully have
received increasing attention in recent years and thus are worthy
of investigation into their clinical features, etiology, and
course:
1. Significant gender differences in prevalence, symptom
profiles, and risk factors for mental disorders, including
neurodevelopmental, neurophysiological, and environmental factors
for men and women that cut across diagnostic categories-for
example, the critical importance of gender in how psychiatric
illness develops and presents; DSM's approach to gender to date;
and relevant research findings and gaps in the epidemiology,
etiology, and pathophysiology of disorders and the gender-related
expression of psychopathology, including the controversial and
complex question of whether DSM should have different diagnostic
criteria for men and women.
2. Mental disorders in infancy and early childhood, including
diagnosis and measurement of psychopathology; PTSD and social and
cognitive factors related to the experience of stress; reactive
attachment disorder (unique in part because of its specificity to
early childhood); mood and anxiety disorders and difficulties in
diagnosis; sleep disorders, including two new disorders,
Night-Waking Dysomnia and Sleep-Onset Dysomnia; feeding disorders,
including the need to address overeating and overfeeding
(especially given the alleged U.S. epidemic of obesity); early
childhood manifestations of behavior disorders; and early symptoms
and diagnosis of autism.
3. Mental disorders in the elderly, such as dementia and
depression, once considered normal consequences of aging but now
understood to represent mental disorders, including the need to
identify specific brain structure abnormalities, biomarkers, and
the many contributing biological, psychosocial, and environmental
factors of mental illness in late life and to understand their
roles in the elderly to better diagnose and monitor disease
progression.
Written for clinicians and researchers alike, this
thought-provoking compendium contributes critical information that
helps enhance our understanding of the causes of mental disorders,
develop effective preventive and treatment interventions, and
inform future editions of DSM and ICD.
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