Psychiatrist
Glen Simblett reflects on what DSM diagnosis might mean in the consulting room and offers the unusual metaphor of
dance to think about how we might best help people.
Doctor and DSM Photo: Dino ahmad ali |
Bring up the topic of DSM 5 and you are
immediately engulfed in controversy. It is an intensely polarising topic with
people either challenging the relentless medicalisation and drug treatment that
it seems to represent, or conversely pointing to the many examples when people
have found DSM diagnosis and drug treatment helpful.
DSM does tend to pull people into
particular positions in relationship to it, and in the process, often produces
conversations that collapse us all into argument and challenge of the
“opposing” viewpoint. Rather than engage in debate about whether DSM is good or
bad for people, as a therapist I am a lot more interested in exploring different
questions. Here’s a question that has meant more to me:
‘What
types of relationships and conditions are needed for DSM knowledge and
practices to add to personal agency and assist people in reclaiming their lives
from problems?’
To answer this, I have to understand some
of the dangers that lurk within DSM knowledge and practices. Then, I think I
need to develop some different understandings and ways of working in order to
counter those dangers. I have to understand how I can dance with DSM in different
ways and different styles as a person, a therapist and psychiatrist.
A view and language become more dangerous
as their certainty increases and claims to truth dominate other possible
explanations. It is easy to forget that ‘truth’ is always historically and
culturally embedded in discourse. The greater the certainty of the discourse,
the less the possibility of discovering alternatives and practising personal
agency. It is important to remind ourselves that DSM 5 is simply a collection
of ideas that a relatively small group of professional experts can agree upon
at a particular moment in history in one country. The very public disagreement
of other professional experts around the world is testimony to that. That
uncertainty is rarely reflected in the office or therapy room, however, and
most of us practice as if we know that bipolar affective disorder,
schizophrenia and personality disorders are real ‘things’ that can be assessed,
measured in severity and modified with treatment. It can be hard to hold
instead to the idea that these ‘things’ represent a current way of thinking
about some human problems and distress that may have other alternative and more
useful explanations. So dancing with DSM tip number one is: hold onto your DSM
partner lightly unless you are absolutely certain that dancing the DSM tango is
the best way to assist the person or family sitting in front of you.
But how do we know what is best?
Another danger is that discourse determines
what can be said or done, and who can say or do it; and as such determines
power relations between people. For example, in DSM 5 discourse it is the
trained clinician who holds the authority to assess and determine which DSM 5
diagnosis can be applied to which person at what time. It is the expert that is
granted the authority to ask questions of the person, rather than the person of
DSM. But we can change the dance style and jive with our DSM partner rather
than tango. We can collaborate with the person or family sitting before us and
explore how closely DSM descriptions match their own personal experience. We
can help them understand which aspects of their experience are not well
captured by those descriptions. We can look together at the limits and
uncertainty of those categorisations. We can treat them as possible
explanations worth exploring together rather than absolute, unshakeable truths.
This is an approach that can have real utility with problems that DSM
categorises as depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder or obsessional disorder.
It is one I always fear using with personality disorders, since that particular
categorisation sits dangerously close to the possibility of the co-creation of
pathological identity. However, at times we have even ventured there when an
official diagnosis of borderline personality disorder opened up a possibility
of accessing a publicly funded dialectical behavioural therapy programme that
the person wanted to try.
We can also choose to disrupt the dance.
Hijacking is when the person following the dance lead takes charge for a brief
period of time. In dancing, it is regarded as poor style. In relation to DSM it
should be an essential skill. A simple hijack I regularly use, is the stubborn
refusal to site problems and disorders inside human beings in both my thinking
and my language. Instead, I ask questions in relational ways. Here is an
example:
‘How
has this diagnosis of bipolar affective disorder got you to make sense of your
life differently? Has it ever got you to examine your relationships and
experiences for evidence of its influence? Is there any risk that you may come
to see all joy, daring, spontaneity or angry outbursts as evidence of mania?
How could you tell if it was mania driving those things?’
But sometimes hijacking isn't enough. Sometimes
we need to backlead our DSM partner. Backleading is when the follower steals
the lead and takes over entirely. When I am working with people captured by
eating disorders, I refuse to categorise either them or the disorder using DSM
criteria. I do this because of my deep concern that processes of DSM
categorisation and the required measurement practices to establish the DSM
diagnostic category, are diminishing of the person and often strongly
supportive of the eating disorder. Instead, I backlead the DSM dance into
alternative steps developed from other understandings gathered from people with
lived experience and documented in post-ana and anti-anorexiabulimia movements.
I use deliberately irreverent and counter-cultural descriptions of the problem
such as abxy, anorexiabulimia or
whatever-we-happen-to-be-calling-it-this-particular-DSM. I strive to understand
the problem much more intimately than the DSM categorisation dance allows,
remaining strongly connected to insider knowledge held by the person. But I
don’t lose touch with DSM practices entirely – instead we discuss very
carefully the effects of weighing and evaluating practices before deciding if
or how we engage in them. We seek agreement of which ones are necessary and how
and when they will be done. We search
for the most anti-abxy way of practising them together.
When working with someone fighting an
eating disorder I do not use force or compulsion (although I did once when we
both agreed it was the best way to get her through the doors of an inpatient
unit whose programme she wanted to try). I never make continuing to work with
the person contingent on following those measuring practices or the results of
them. Instead, we search for ways past barriers that work for both of us. I
never, ever confuse the problem with the person.
Finally, we can simply decline to dance
with DSM at all. Unfortunately as a practising psychiatrist subject to audit,
peer review and the restraints of ‘best practice’, this is rarely a position
that I can afford to take. Not only that, but in the taking up of that dance
position I have to let go of an entire body of knowledge and practice from
modernist scientific research about the effects of medication and researched
talking treatments on populations of people with DSM categorised disorders.
This has always seemed to me too big a loss to contemplate, although I have
always respected and admired those who do decline DSM’s dance.
If you would like to read more about my
thoughts on this, backed up with a great deal more theory and examples of the positions I take in my practice take a
look at my recent article in the Australian & New Zealand Journal of Family
Therapy available free online here.
Many controversies related to DSM 5. Depression is the main category in DSM
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