Culture and psychiatric diagnosis

Adv Psychosom Med. 2013:33:15-30. doi: 10.1159/000348725. Epub 2013 Jun 25.

Abstract

Since the publication of DSM-IV in 1994, neurobiologists and anthropologists have criticized the rigidity of its diagnostic criteria that appear to exclude whole classes of alternate illness presentations, as well as the lack of attention in contemporary psychiatric nosology to the role of contextual factors in the emergence and characteristics of psychopathology. Experts in culture and mental health have responded to these criticisms by revising the very process of diagnosis for DSM-5. Specifically, the DSM-5 Cultural Issues Subgroup has recommended that concepts of culture be included more prominently in several areas: an introductory chapter on Cultural Aspects of Psychiatric Diagnosis - composed of a conceptual introduction, a revised Outline for Cultural Formulation, a Cultural Formulation Interview that operationalizes this Outline, and a glossary on cultural concepts of distress - as well as material directly related to culture that is incorporated into the description of each disorder. This chapter surveys these recommendations to demonstrate how culture and context interact with psychiatric diagnosis at multiple levels. A greater appreciation of the interplay between culture, context, and biology can help clinicians improve diagnostic and treatment planning.

MeSH terms

  • Culture*
  • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
  • Dictionaries as Topic
  • Humans
  • Interview, Psychological / methods
  • Mental Disorders* / classification
  • Mental Disorders* / diagnosis
  • Mental Disorders* / ethnology
  • Mental Disorders* / psychology
  • Mental Health / ethnology*
  • Mentally Ill Persons / psychology
  • Psychopathology
  • Social Adjustment