schizophrenia - diagnosis and classification

    Cards (11)

    • positive symptoms are anything that adds something to your personality such as hallucinations and delusions
    • negative symptoms are anything that takes away from you personality such as speech poverty and avolition
    • The classification system for the UK is ICD-10
    • the classification system for the US is DSM-5
    • the classification systems of ICD-10 and DSM-5 differ as DSM-5 requires one positive symptom and ICD-10 requires two or more negative symptoms for diagnosis
    • ao3 strength - has good reliability as uses inter-rater reliability and test retest reliability.
      Osorio et al 2019 reported excellent reliability in 180 participants using DSM-5
    • Ao3 weakness - it's subjective, so different clinicians may diagnose differently based on their own experiences which can lead to misdiagnosis.
    • a03 limitation - low validity
      • clear differences between the two classification systems shown by Cheriaux et al 2009
    • a03 - limitation - co morbidity
      • questions validity of diagnosis
      • Buckley et al showed 1/2 schizophrenics had depression or substance abuse
      • problem for classification as schizophrenia may not exist singularly
    • a03 limitation - gender bias
      • woman diagnosed less than men maybe due to them getting more support
      • means woman may not be getting the needed treatment
    • a03 - other limitations
      • system overlap
      • culture bias
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