Psychiatric Diagnosis – Fact?
Psychiatric Diagnosis – Pros and Cons
If you are diagnosed as being ‘clinically depressed’ are you actually medically ill?
Is there actually something wrong with your brain?
Is your ‘brain chemistry’ different to a person who just feels a bit ‘pissed-off’ at losing their job?
Because psychiatrists, doctors and the medical profession are percieved as being unquestionably authoritarian in all matters concerning ‘human health’, many people will assume that these diagnoses must be ‘correct’ and unequivocal.
However, there is a growing disdain amongst the psychological (Including the British Psychological Society – BPS) community that a great many ‘normal human life difficulties’ are being pathologised or medicalised resulting in millions of people being ‘labelled’ as having a ‘medical disease’ – or in the parlance of the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of mental disorders), a ‘disorder of the mind’.
Many eminent psychiatrists have voiced their concern over this growing trend, non more vocal than Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry Dr. Thomas Szasz who, amongst other numerous quotes points out that:
The primary function and goal of the DSMs is to lend credibility to the claim that certain behaviours, or more correctly, mis-behaviors, are mental disorders and that such disorders are, therefore, medical diseases.
Thus, pathological gambling enjoys the same status as myocardial infarction (blood clot in heart artery).
In effect, the APA (American Psychiatric Association) maintains that betting is something the patient cannot control; and that, generally, all psychiatric ‘symptoms’ or ‘disorders’ are outside the patient’s control. I reject that claim as patently false.
and also, on the same subject:
The ostensible validity of the DSM is reinforced by psychiatry’s claim that mental illnesses are brain diseases – a claim supposedly based on recent discoveries in neuroscience, made possible by imaging techniques for diagnosis and pharmacological agents for treatment.
This is not true.
There are no objective diagnostic tests to confirm or dis-confirm the diagnosis of depression; the diagnosis can and must be made solely on the basis of the patient’s appearance and behavior and the reports of others about his behavior.

Psychiatric Diagnosis is a Subjective Opinion
If you visit your GP and describe your ‘feelings’ he/she will open the UK equivalent of the DSM, the World Health Organization’s International Classification of Diseases book and tick the boxes that correspond to your description of your symptoms.
On the basis of the boxes that have been ticked, your GP will provide you with a psychiatric diagnosis – NOT a medical evaluation.
Many reading this post might find it odd that a General Practitioner (GP) is able to provide a psychiatric diagnosis WITHOUT any psychiatric training at all, but they are legitimately allowed to do so because psychiatry is considered to be a higher ‘echelon’ academic subject and the DSM manual is sufficiently authoritarian to allow non-psychiatrists to accurately provide a diagnosis.
If your GP then proceeds to provide you with a diagnosis of ‘clinically depressed’ you will be ‘classified’ as having a disease of the mind (Brain).
All this from you talking about the way you have felt over the last 4 weeks – not a single medical test in sight.
Interestingly, all of the above diagnostic evaluations may be applied to you even if its not really how you have felt at all – ie. you simply told your GP that you felt this way.
Surely there must be something fundamentally wrong about being able to receive a ‘medical diagnosis’ (an illness) by simply ‘making up your symptoms’.
Its like being told that you have diabetes without actually having a blood test but simply by describing your symptoms.
Who Benefits from a Psychiatric Diagnosis?
There are, undoubtedly, many people who, on experiencing ‘feelings’, ‘moods’ or ‘patterns of behaviour’ that seem unfamiliar to them in their normal daily lives, are comforted to ‘discover’ that they are due to some sort of ‘mental disorder’ or ‘mental illness’.
In these cases, a psychiatric diagnosis may also provide access to healtcare services that might otherwise be unavailable.
Just as many people will, on the other hand, find the process highly stigmatising and un-helpful.
In many cases this ‘labelling’ of a person as having a ‘mental disease’ leads to that person then ascribing their behaviours NOT to themselves or their beliefs but to this ‘disease’ that is totally beyond their control.
This ‘dis-empowering’ concept frequently leads onto the notion that the only way forward is through taking medication that has been specifically developed for that particular ‘illness’.
we try to approach many of these types of problems by helping people to develop a degree of self-insight into their thoughts and feelings and how the idea of ‘limiting beliefs’ can negatively contribute to the way that we feel.
This is a way of directly dealing with the unhelpful components of being ‘labelled’ as ‘mentally ill’.
A Psychiatric diagnosis undoubtedly benefits the pharmaceutical businesses who then have a new ‘mental illness’ included in the DSM which then legitimises the production of a new drug that can then be sold to health-care providers around the World.
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