American Psychiatric Association
Author of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM-IV
About the Author
Works by American Psychiatric Association
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM-IV (1952) — Author; Author, some editions — 2,000 copies, 8 reviews
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: DSM-5 (2013) — Author — 1,053 copies, 5 reviews
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Text Revision Dsm-5-tr (2022) 257 copies, 1 review
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Dsm-Iii-R (1985) — Author — 236 copies, 1 review
American Psychiatric Association Practice Guidelines for the Treatment of Psychiatric Disorders: Compendium 2000 (1994) 33 copies
The Practice of Electroconvulsive Therapy: Recommendations for Treatment Training and Privileging : A Task Force Report of the American Psychiatric (1990) 21 copies
DSM-II Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. (second edition) (1968) 15 copies, 1 review
Quick Reference to the American Psychiatric Association Practice Guidelines for the Treatment of Psychiatric Disorders: Compendium 2002 (2002) 9 copies
Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Patients with Borderline Personality Disorder (American Psychiatric Association Practice Guidelines) (2001) 8 copies
Treatments of psychiatric disorders : a task force report of the American Psychiatric Association (1989) 5 copies
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: DSM-I Original Edition (2008) — Author — 5 copies
Guia de Consulta de Los Criterios Diagnosticos del DSM-5(TM): Spanish Edition of the Desk Reference to the Diagnostic Criteria from DSM-5(TM) (2013) 5 copies
Practice Guideline for Psychiatric Evaluation of Adults (American Psychiatric Association Practice Guidelines) (1995) 5 copies
Treating the homeless mentally ill : a report of the Task Force on the Homeless Mentally Ill (1992) 4 copies
Management of Tardive Dyskinesia: Collected Articles from Hospital and Community Psychiatry (1986) 3 copies
The American Psychiatric Association Practice Guideline on the Use of Antipsychotics to Treat Agitation or Psychosis in Patients with Dementia (2016) 3 copies
Desk Reference to the Diagnostic Criteria from Dsm-5(r] [DESK REF TO THE DIAGNOSTIC CRI] [Spiral] (2013) 3 copies
Anxiety Disorders: Dsm-5(r) Selections by American Psychiatric Association (2015-09-02) (2015) — Author — 3 copies
Dangerous Sex Offenders: A Task Force Report of the American Psychiatric Association (1999) — Author — 3 copies
Practice Guidelines for the Treatment of Patients with Major Depressive Disorder (American Psychiatric Association Practice Guidelines) (2000) 3 copies
Mini DSM-5® : critères diagnostiques 3 copies
DSM-5-TR Manual Diagnóstico y Estadístico de los Trastornos Mentales: Texto revisado (2023) 2 copies, 1 review
Caterpillar to Butterfly 2 copies
The American Psychiatric Association Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Patients With Borderline Personality Disorder (2025) 2 copies
Practice Guideline for Major Depressive Disorder in Adults (American Psychiatric Association Practice Guidelines) (1993) 2 copies
Farm 2 copies
Staatsmijnen in Limburg 2 copies
Opinions of the Ethics Committee on the Principles of Medical Ethics With Annotations Especially Applicable to Psychiatry, 2001 (2001) 2 copies
Psychiatric services 2 copies
Management of Violent Behavior: Collected Articles from Hospital and Community Psychiatry (1988) 2 copies
APA:DSM-5.Preg. Autoev. Exam.Crit.Diag.: Exámenes tipo test sobre los criterios diagnósticos (Spanish Edition) (2015) 2 copies
Issues in Community Treatment of Severe Mental Illness: A Compendium of Articles from Psychiatric Services (1999) 1 copy
De verbandkamer 1 copy
Intermezzo 1 copy
The Young Adult Chronic Patient: Collected Articles from Hospital and Community Psychiatry (1985) 1 copy
Practice Guideline for Eating Disorders (American Psychiatric Association Practice Guidelines) (1993) 1 copy
Families and Mental Health Treatment: A Compendium of Articles from Psychiatric Services and Hospital and Community Psychiatry (1998) 1 copy
Pocket Guideline for the Assessment And Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder (Pocket Guidelines) (2006) 1 copy
Paul Appelbaum on Law and Psychiatry: Collected Articles from Hospital and Community Psychiatry (1989) 1 copy
Treatment of Mental Illness and Substance Abuse: A Compendium of Articles from Psychiatric Services (1999) 1 copy
Violent Behavior and Mental Illness: A Compendium of Articles from Psychiatric Services and Hospital and Community Psychiatry (1997) 1 copy
Instructie voor seingevers 1 copy
Gereedschapsboekje 1 copy
Biofeedback 1 copy
American psychiatric association practice guideline for the treatment of patients with schizophrenia 1 copy
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders( DSM-I Original Edition)[DIAGNOSTIC & STATISTICAL MANUA][Paperback] (2008) 1 copy
PSA-R Psychiatric Self-Assessment & Review RESIDENT EDITION (Syllabus provided on included CD-ROM) (2001) 1 copy
Guia de Referência Rápida para os Critérios de Diagnóstico - DSM-5 (Portuguese Edition) (2015) 1 copy
Newsletter of the Gay Caucus of Members of the American Psychiatric Association Vol. 5 No. 4,5 1 copy
State mental hospitals and the elderly : a task force report of the American Psychiatric Association (1993) 1 copy
Staatsmijnen 60 1 copy
DSM Holland 1966 1 copy
DSM Staff Handbook 1 copy
Fruit 1 copy
Animals 1 copy
Egg to Chicken 1 copy
Traffic Signs 1 copy
Ocean 1 copy
Toys 1 copy
Numbers 1-5 1 copy
Staatsmijnen 59 1 copy
Staatsmijnen 58 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- American Psychiatric Association
- Other names
- American Psychiatric Association
- Birthdate
- 1844
- Gender
- n/a
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM-IV (4th Edition) by American Psychiatric Association
Most, I'm sure, wouldn't consider reading the DSM-IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th ed.) for pleasure, and I think that's a shame. Because even though the DSM-IV is used primarily in a clincal setting by highly skilled psychiatric professionals for the differential-diagnosing and treatment of mankind's complex plethora of psychopathologies both common and arcane and every run-of-the-mill disorder inbetween, I opine that the DSM-IV, even though it reads as dry as show more the Sahara Desert of southern Algeria/northern Mauritania, if not in fact drier, nevertheless can be as wildly entertaining an alternative to playing charades or Pictionary at your next dinner or business office party. I recommend taking turns with your co-workers flipping through the DSM-IVs voluminous pages, so that you can self-diagnose one another's leanings -- or predispositions -- toward hundreds of interesting (though dire) mental maladies.
"I think Susie over in HR has a delusional disorder, erotomanic type, coded 297.1, what do you think, Sam?"
"I do not! I heard that. What's the psychiatric code for 'creep', John, because clearly you have a creep disorder!*"
Get the idea? Try it out with friends and family too, or ... on yourself!
However, before one would would ever want to engage in DSM-IV play for fun, one should first have a very clear handle on it's appropriate uses in a professional, and preferably clinical, objective, non-politically intrusive, purely academic, empirically based -- psychiatric -- setting.
The DSM-IV is organized along its five axes. Each axis corresponds to specific subsets of clinical disorders and their diagnostic (and differential-diagnostic) criteria, etiology, behavorial profile of one afflicted with whatever disorder, treatment options, etc. Also, every specific disorder has its own specific code, just like there's specific police codes for every kind of crime or violation.
So, suppose you suffered from "Neuroleptic-Induced Tardive Dyskinesia," you'd be coded 333.82 on all the paperwork which would then hopefully help convince the loophole loving insurance companies to pay your mental health practitioner so you could keep on receiving treatment without paying out of pocket and get better soon.
Axis I of the DSM-IV focuses on "Clinical Disorders and Other Conditions That May Be a Focus of Clinical Attention." Simply put, these are the psychopathological (love that word, "psychopathological") biggys: Major Depression, Bipolar Disorder, Schizophrenia, Anxiety Disorder NOS (Not Otherwise Specified), etc.
Axis II is my favorite axis; it covers the Personality Disorders. If people aren't seeking out a therapist for their depression or anxiety, it will undoubtedly be, according to the APA (American Psychiatric Association, which publishes the DSM-IV) for their maladaptive personality types, which can wreak havoc on all levels of their involvement in the social spectrum, most notably, of course, in marriages and in the workplace and at school. There are only eleven Personality Disorders. Let's list each and every one of them, along with their corresponding codes.
1. Paranoid Personality Disorder (301.0). Self explanatory.
2. Schizoid Personality Disorderr (301.20). The loner.
3. Schizotypal Personality Disorder (301.22). People who act bizarre, do bizzare stuff, but don't hear voices and whose symptomatology presents with no clear-cut psychosis. Ergo, they don't make the all out schizophrenia cut.
4. Antisocial Personality Disorder (301.7). Every sociopath who's every lived; every serial killer also, has had this type of PD. It's the primary personality type of most criminals.
5. Borderline Personality Disorder (301.83). These are your stalkers and your "cutters". The teenage girl in White Oleander was on her way to becoming Borderline. Borderlines are miserable, and they're adept at sharing their misery, whether you like sharing it with them or not.
6. Histrionic Personality Disorder (301.50). Think Liza Minelli, Liberace, or any of The Real Housewives of Orange County.
7. Narcissistic Personality Disorder (301.81). I'd argue a lot of actors have this PD. Some doctors or some brain surgeons. It's the God-complex PD of PDs, for those who deem themselves all-powerful, able to control any outcome; they are the center of theirs (and they think, our) universes.
8. Avoidant Personality Disorder (301.82). Closely related to social phobia. Anxiety driven PD. Differentiated from Schizoid PD by concern. Avoidants care about and want to connect with other people, but are shy and inhibited from doing so, while Schizoids, frankly, couldn't give a shit whether they connect with people or not.
9. Dependent Personality Disorder (301.6). If you're 37 and have never left your parent's nest, you probably have Dependent PD. Or the classic spousal abuse scenario in which the person abused refuses to leave her abuser even though she knows down deep she should.
10. Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder (301.4). All too common. Hard to overcome, as they all are. Think Woody Allen. Remember Jack Nicholson in As Good as it Gets?
11. Personality Disorder NOS (301.9).
Axis III covers General Medical Conditions. Perhaps you've got a physical ailment - migraines, say - which negatively affects your mood. Or you suffer from diabetes which can also affect your mood. Any medical conditions that cause psychological problems or contribute to them would be specified on this axis.
Axis IV pertains to Psychosocial and Environmental Problems. Perhaps the most subjective axis for the diagnostician to determine, since they must trust what the patient is telling them; that is, how the patient perceives themselves getting along in the world: in their marriage, relationships, job, education, etc. Are there any outside factors like a flood, say, or a fire resulting in the loss of their home, negatively contributing to their psychological profile?
Axis V: Global Assessment of Functioning. This is where a good clinician can wrap up all the diagnostic criteria and observations and tie a pretty (or not so pretty) bow on the patients overrall psychology, good or bad. There's a GAF scale the clinician uses, as well, to track a patient's progress and provide a numeric figure for a pretty nebulous construct: how well is the patient operating in all the psychologically and behaviorally pertinent areas of their life under inspection?
So that's the DSM-IV (soon to be the DSM-V) in a nutshell.
* searching the literature, I could find no mention of "creep disorder". Creeps, I'd wager (w/out any longitudinal data to support such a hypothesis, of course) are generally your garden variety sufferers of -- and victimizers as a result of -- their narcissistic or antisocial personality disorders. show less
"I think Susie over in HR has a delusional disorder, erotomanic type, coded 297.1, what do you think, Sam?"
"I do not! I heard that. What's the psychiatric code for 'creep', John, because clearly you have a creep disorder!*"
Get the idea? Try it out with friends and family too, or ... on yourself!
However, before one would would ever want to engage in DSM-IV play for fun, one should first have a very clear handle on it's appropriate uses in a professional, and preferably clinical, objective, non-politically intrusive, purely academic, empirically based -- psychiatric -- setting.
The DSM-IV is organized along its five axes. Each axis corresponds to specific subsets of clinical disorders and their diagnostic (and differential-diagnostic) criteria, etiology, behavorial profile of one afflicted with whatever disorder, treatment options, etc. Also, every specific disorder has its own specific code, just like there's specific police codes for every kind of crime or violation.
So, suppose you suffered from "Neuroleptic-Induced Tardive Dyskinesia," you'd be coded 333.82 on all the paperwork which would then hopefully help convince the loophole loving insurance companies to pay your mental health practitioner so you could keep on receiving treatment without paying out of pocket and get better soon.
Axis I of the DSM-IV focuses on "Clinical Disorders and Other Conditions That May Be a Focus of Clinical Attention." Simply put, these are the psychopathological (love that word, "psychopathological") biggys: Major Depression, Bipolar Disorder, Schizophrenia, Anxiety Disorder NOS (Not Otherwise Specified), etc.
Axis II is my favorite axis; it covers the Personality Disorders. If people aren't seeking out a therapist for their depression or anxiety, it will undoubtedly be, according to the APA (American Psychiatric Association, which publishes the DSM-IV) for their maladaptive personality types, which can wreak havoc on all levels of their involvement in the social spectrum, most notably, of course, in marriages and in the workplace and at school. There are only eleven Personality Disorders. Let's list each and every one of them, along with their corresponding codes.
1. Paranoid Personality Disorder (301.0). Self explanatory.
2. Schizoid Personality Disorderr (301.20). The loner.
3. Schizotypal Personality Disorder (301.22). People who act bizarre, do bizzare stuff, but don't hear voices and whose symptomatology presents with no clear-cut psychosis. Ergo, they don't make the all out schizophrenia cut.
4. Antisocial Personality Disorder (301.7). Every sociopath who's every lived; every serial killer also, has had this type of PD. It's the primary personality type of most criminals.
5. Borderline Personality Disorder (301.83). These are your stalkers and your "cutters". The teenage girl in White Oleander was on her way to becoming Borderline. Borderlines are miserable, and they're adept at sharing their misery, whether you like sharing it with them or not.
6. Histrionic Personality Disorder (301.50). Think Liza Minelli, Liberace, or any of The Real Housewives of Orange County.
7. Narcissistic Personality Disorder (301.81). I'd argue a lot of actors have this PD. Some doctors or some brain surgeons. It's the God-complex PD of PDs, for those who deem themselves all-powerful, able to control any outcome; they are the center of theirs (and they think, our) universes.
8. Avoidant Personality Disorder (301.82). Closely related to social phobia. Anxiety driven PD. Differentiated from Schizoid PD by concern. Avoidants care about and want to connect with other people, but are shy and inhibited from doing so, while Schizoids, frankly, couldn't give a shit whether they connect with people or not.
9. Dependent Personality Disorder (301.6). If you're 37 and have never left your parent's nest, you probably have Dependent PD. Or the classic spousal abuse scenario in which the person abused refuses to leave her abuser even though she knows down deep she should.
10. Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder (301.4). All too common. Hard to overcome, as they all are. Think Woody Allen. Remember Jack Nicholson in As Good as it Gets?
11. Personality Disorder NOS (301.9).
Axis III covers General Medical Conditions. Perhaps you've got a physical ailment - migraines, say - which negatively affects your mood. Or you suffer from diabetes which can also affect your mood. Any medical conditions that cause psychological problems or contribute to them would be specified on this axis.
Axis IV pertains to Psychosocial and Environmental Problems. Perhaps the most subjective axis for the diagnostician to determine, since they must trust what the patient is telling them; that is, how the patient perceives themselves getting along in the world: in their marriage, relationships, job, education, etc. Are there any outside factors like a flood, say, or a fire resulting in the loss of their home, negatively contributing to their psychological profile?
Axis V: Global Assessment of Functioning. This is where a good clinician can wrap up all the diagnostic criteria and observations and tie a pretty (or not so pretty) bow on the patients overrall psychology, good or bad. There's a GAF scale the clinician uses, as well, to track a patient's progress and provide a numeric figure for a pretty nebulous construct: how well is the patient operating in all the psychologically and behaviorally pertinent areas of their life under inspection?
So that's the DSM-IV (soon to be the DSM-V) in a nutshell.
* searching the literature, I could find no mention of "creep disorder". Creeps, I'd wager (w/out any longitudinal data to support such a hypothesis, of course) are generally your garden variety sufferers of -- and victimizers as a result of -- their narcissistic or antisocial personality disorders. show less
DSM was developed not as a diagnostic guide for mental health providers, but as an indexing tool to permit wardens and other officials as large, residential psychiatric facilities to characterize their inmates for documenting and funding purposes. The descriptions of disorders are brief, not especially etiological, and assume that if you had the book in hand, you didn't need anyone to describe the diagnostic characteristics of, say, Inadequate Personality Disorder to you.
APA (I mean the show more other APA, not the American Psychological Association) reissued this inaugural volume on its 50th-ish anniversary. It's quite fascinating to compare to subsequent editions (DSM-II, DSM-III, DSM-III-R, DSM-IV, DSM-IV-TR, and the forthcoming DSM-5), which are criticized for being weightier tomes.* Look at DSM or DSM-II, though, and you might be glad for the heft of later editions, whose proliferation of pages is accounted for less by infinitely finer gradations of diagnosis, though those exist, or by pathologizing more aspects of behavior, though those exist as well, but bu observable criteria that, though one may take exception to them, do at least let us know that we are arguing about the same phenomena.
*Yes, I own them all. Are you jealous? show less
APA (I mean the show more other APA, not the American Psychological Association) reissued this inaugural volume on its 50th-ish anniversary. It's quite fascinating to compare to subsequent editions (DSM-II, DSM-III, DSM-III-R, DSM-IV, DSM-IV-TR, and the forthcoming DSM-5), which are criticized for being weightier tomes.* Look at DSM or DSM-II, though, and you might be glad for the heft of later editions, whose proliferation of pages is accounted for less by infinitely finer gradations of diagnosis, though those exist, or by pathologizing more aspects of behavior, though those exist as well, but bu observable criteria that, though one may take exception to them, do at least let us know that we are arguing about the same phenomena.
*Yes, I own them all. Are you jealous? show less
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th Edition: DSM-5 by American Psychological Association
Relatable, but dense. Pretty dull, too. No plot, characters were all very 2D, and there was a lot of telling, not showing. There was also no dialogue, which is something I look for in a good book.
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR) by American Psychiatric Association
In the recent National Mental Health and Well Being report published by the Ministry of Health (Singapore) in 2023, there has been a decline in the state of Mental Wellness among Singaporeans, from 13.4% with some condition in 2020 to 17% in 2022, with youths aged 18 to 29 being the hardest hit.
What exactly constitutes a mental illness, and how do psychiatrists diagnose patients? Although the concept of mental disorder lacks a consistent operational definition that covers all situations, show more this handbook has managed to classify mental illness based on criteria sets with defining features.
The bulk of this handbook focuses on clinical disorders such as mood, anxiety, sleep, substance-related and psychotic disorders, which could be of interest to both caregivers and healthcare providers, and not just medical students.
Book material worth noting include (i) Decision trees for differential diagnosis (Appendix A), which aid the clinician in understanding the organization structure of DSM-IV classification and (ii) A glossary of technical terms (Appendix C) for reference by lay readers.
I would recommend this valuable handbook to students keen to learn more about the diagnosis of mental disorders, as well as caregivers who wish to gain additional insight into their loved one’s condition. show less
What exactly constitutes a mental illness, and how do psychiatrists diagnose patients? Although the concept of mental disorder lacks a consistent operational definition that covers all situations, show more this handbook has managed to classify mental illness based on criteria sets with defining features.
The bulk of this handbook focuses on clinical disorders such as mood, anxiety, sleep, substance-related and psychotic disorders, which could be of interest to both caregivers and healthcare providers, and not just medical students.
Book material worth noting include (i) Decision trees for differential diagnosis (Appendix A), which aid the clinician in understanding the organization structure of DSM-IV classification and (ii) A glossary of technical terms (Appendix C) for reference by lay readers.
I would recommend this valuable handbook to students keen to learn more about the diagnosis of mental disorders, as well as caregivers who wish to gain additional insight into their loved one’s condition. show less
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- Works
- 183
- Members
- 4,517
- Popularity
- #5,553
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 20
- ISBNs
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