The document provides an overview of the revision process for the mental disorders chapter of the International Classification of Diseases, 11th Revision (ICD-11). Some key points:
1) The ICD-11 revision aims to improve clinical utility for frontline health workers globally and is being developed through collaboration with stakeholders.
2) The structure of the mental disorders chapter is being reorganized with approximately 24 diagnostic blocks rather than the 10 blocks in ICD-10.
3) Diagnostic guidelines are being used instead of strict diagnostic criteria, providing clinicians flexibility while focusing on essential features of each disorder.
The document provides an overview of the revision process for the mental disorders chapter of the International Classification of Diseases, 11th Revision (ICD-11). Some key points:
1) The ICD-11 revision aims to improve clinical utility for frontline health workers globally and is being developed through collaboration with stakeholders.
2) The structure of the mental disorders chapter is being reorganized with approximately 24 diagnostic blocks rather than the 10 blocks in ICD-10.
3) Diagnostic guidelines are being used instead of strict diagnostic criteria, providing clinicians flexibility while focusing on essential features of each disorder.
The document provides an overview of the revision process for the mental disorders chapter of the International Classification of Diseases, 11th Revision (ICD-11). Some key points:
1) The ICD-11 revision aims to improve clinical utility for frontline health workers globally and is being developed through collaboration with stakeholders.
2) The structure of the mental disorders chapter is being reorganized with approximately 24 diagnostic blocks rather than the 10 blocks in ICD-10.
3) Diagnostic guidelines are being used instead of strict diagnostic criteria, providing clinicians flexibility while focusing on essential features of each disorder.
The document provides an overview of the revision process for the mental disorders chapter of the International Classification of Diseases, 11th Revision (ICD-11). Some key points:
1) The ICD-11 revision aims to improve clinical utility for frontline health workers globally and is being developed through collaboration with stakeholders.
2) The structure of the mental disorders chapter is being reorganized with approximately 24 diagnostic blocks rather than the 10 blocks in ICD-10.
3) Diagnostic guidelines are being used instead of strict diagnostic criteria, providing clinicians flexibility while focusing on essential features of each disorder.
Professor of Clinical Psychiatry, Columbia University Consultant to WHO Secretariat, Revision of the Mental and Behavioral Disorders Chapter of the International Classification of Diseases Continuing Medical Education Commercial Disclosure Requirement I, Michael First, have the following commercial relationship(s) to disclose: Lundbeck, faculty of Lundbeck International Neuroscience Foundation Roche, consultant American Psychiatric Association, book royalties Wiley-Blackwell, book royalties ICD-11 Revision Principles Highest goal is to help WHO member countries reduce disease burden of mental disorders Focus on clinical utility: facilitate identification and treatment by global front- line health workers Must be undertaken in collaboration with stakeholders: countries, health professionals, service users/consumers and families Features of ICD-11 Revision ICD-11 being implemented in a hierarchical data base that reflects the hierarchical structure of the classification All disorders (not just mental disorders) will have both definitions and content about diagnosis, differential diagnosis, etc. Information to be entered in database through Content Forms developed by working groups, one for each “node” in the classification Fundamental ICD/DSM Differences ICD DSM
Produced by global health Produced by American
agency of UN Psychiatric Association Free and open resource for Intellectual property of APA public health benefit For countries; and front-line Primarily for psychiatrists and service providers psychologists Global, multidisciplinary, Dominated by US, Anglophone multilingual development perspective Approved by World Health Approved by APA Board of Assembly Trustees and APA Assembly ICD-11 Timeline 2007 Appointment of Advisory Group 2010-2011 Formative field studies Fall 2012 First draft of proposals to be posted on WHO web site http://apps.who.int/classifications/icd11/browse /f/en 2012-2013 Field trials 2014 final changes 2015 Approval by World Health Assembly Diagnostic Code Expansion - I Each “character” represents a level in the hierarchy; e.g., first ICD-10 character is chapter; alphabetic nature allows for 26 basic divisions or chapters Numeric decimal nature of other characters limits each level to 10 divisions Division of mental disorders into 10 blocks created suboptimal groupings (e.g.. F4 Neurotic, Stress-related, and somatoform disorders) Diagnostic Code Expansion - II ICD-11 will no longer restrict character places to 10; instead will be alphabetic or else two digit per character Consequently, 24 block divisions expected (e.g. Former F5 disorders, Behavioral syndromes associated with physiological disturbances and physical factors, will each get their own block, e.g., eating disorders, sleep disorders, sexual dysfunctions, etc.) ICD-10 Chapter 5 Structure - I F0 Organic, including F3 Mood Disorders symptomatic (includes (includes bipolar and depressive disorders) dementia, delirium, disorders due to medical conditions) F4 Neurotic, stress- F1 Mental Disorders Due related, and somatoform to Psychoactive Substance disorders (includes phobias, Use (includes Dependence, panic, GAD, OCD, PTSD, adjustment, dissociative, Harmful Use, Substance- conversion, somatoform, induced disorders) neurasthenia, depersonalization) F2 Schizophrenia, schizotypal, and delusional disorders (includes acute psychotic disorders, schizoaffective, etc.) ICD-10 Chapter 5 Structure - II F5 Behavioral syndromes F8 Disorders of associated with psychological physiological disturbances development (includes and physical factors speech and language, learning disorders, motor, autism) (includes eating, sleep, sexual dysfunction, mental disorders F9 Behavioral and associated with puerperium) emotional disorders with F6 Disorders of adult onset usually occurring in personality and behavior childhood and adolescence (includes impulse control, GID, (includes ADHD, conduct, paraphilias, sexual orientation, separation anxiety, reactive factitious) attachment, tics, enuresis, encopresis, pica, feeding F7 Mental Retardation disorder, stereotyped movement, stuttering) ICD-11 Chapter V Structure - I 05 A Neurodevelop- 05 F Disorders Speci- mental disorders fically Associated With 05 B Schizophrenia Stress Spectrum and Primary 05 G Dissociative Psychotic Disorders Disorders 05 C Bipolar and 05 H Bodily Distress Related Disorders Disorders and 05 D Depressive Psychological and Disorders Behavioral Factors 05 E Anxiety and Fear- Associated with Related Disorders Diseases Classified Elsewhere ICD-11 Chapter V Structure - II 05 I Obsessive 05 N Acute Substance Compulsive and Related Intoxication Disorders 05 O Harmful Use of 05 J Feeding and Eating Substances Disorders 05 P Substance 05 K Elimination Dependence Disorders 05 Q Substance 05 L Sleep Disorders Withdrawal Syndrome 05 M Sexual 05 R Substance-induced Dysfunctions and mental disorders Compulsive Sexual 05 S Behavioral Behavior Disorder addictions ICD-11 Chapter V Structure - III 05 T Disruptive 05 X Neurocognitive behavior and dissocial Disroders disorders 05 Y Mental and 05 U Disorders of behavioral disorders Personality attributable to 05 V Paraphilic disorders or diseases Disorders classified elsewhere 05 W Factitious Disorders Regrouping of Diagnostic Classes in ICD-11/DSM-5 - I DSM-IV/ICD-10: Groupings based primarily on common presenting symptom, e.g., anxiety disorder DSM-5/ICD-11: Groupings based as much as possible on common underlying etiological factors E.g.,Obsessive-Compulsive and related disorders: presumed underlying common neurobiological factors Regrouping of Diagnostic Classes in ICD-11/DSM-5 - II Supported creation of a diagnostic grouping based on etiologically associated with stressful life circumstances Given that other ICD-11 disorders may be associated with stressors (e.g., major depression), these are differentiated by being definitionally associated with stress. Disorders Specifically Associated With Stress ICD-11 ICD-10 Traumatic Stress Disorders F43 Reactions to severe stress, PTSD and adjustment disorders Complex PTSD F43.0 Acute stress reaction Prolonged Grief Disorder F43.1 PTSD F43.2 Adjustment Disorders Adjustment Disorder Attachment Disorders F94 Disorders of social functioning with onset specific Reactive attachment disorder to childhood Disinhibited social engagement disorder F94.1 Reactive attachment disorder F94.2 Disinhibited attachment Acute stress reaction (not a disorder of childhood mental disorder) Diagnostic Guidelines vs. Criteria Diagnostic Guidelines are intended to provide clinicians with guidance on making the diagnosis and focus on the essential features of the disorder (i..e, those that are required for the diagnosis and that differentiate it from other disorders). Definitions do not have diagnostic criteria. Instead, there are guidelines summarized as bullet points, followed by paragraphs that expand on these points. Diagnostic Guidelines vs. Criteria - II The bullet points resemble diagnostic criteria by briefly presenting the required elements of the diagnosis in descriptive terms They differ by virtue of avoiding algorithmic pseudoprecise requirements like symptom counts or precise durations, unless these have been specifically validated (e.g., to differentiate disorder from non-disorders) Diagnostic Guidelines Bullet points/guidelines can be divided into three basic types depending on their function: Those that describe an essential feature of the condition Those that explicitly set the threshold with normality, e.g., by requiring a minimum level of impairment Those that differentiate the condition from other disorders Examples (from Prolonged Grief) Descriptive essential features (from PG): Following the loss of a loved one, the development of persistent and severe separation distress characterized by yearning or longing for the deceased and associated emotional pain Setting Threshold for Disorder (from PG): The symptoms persist for an extended period of time (e.g., greater than six months) and cause significant functional impairment The symptoms go beyond a normative grief response given the person’s cultural context Example (from Adjustment Disorder) Guideline Setting Boundary with other ICD- 11 disorders The symptoms do not meet the definitional requirements of any other mental disorder Ways to Participate in ICD-11 Field Studies Sign up to participate in the Global Practice Network for internet- based field studies; available now in English, Spanish, French, Japanese, Arabic First internet-based study to focus on disorders specifically associated with stress; participation of ISTSS members highly important Provide individual comments on initial proposals to be posted on WHO website by December 2012; will be updated as proposals are modified, comment to be taken throughout revision process Participate in clinic-based evaluative field studies beginning early 2013 For more information: Spencer Evans: [email protected]