→ othermental disorders. includes psychiatric disorders that are due to other medical conditions or that don’t meet all the requirements for any of the other psychiatric disorder groups.
→ substance-related and addictive disorders. e.g., gambling disorder
DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
→ substance-related and addictive disorders. associated with excessive use of alcohol,opioids, recreational drugs, hallucinogens, and six other types of drugs.
→ personality disorders. involves a lasting pattern of emotionalinstability and unhealthybehaviors that seriously disrupt daily living and relationships.
DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
→ somatic symptom and related disorder. somatic means "of the body"
DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
→ somatic symptom and related disorder. e.g., illness anxiety disorder, somatic symptom disorder (i.e., previously known as hypochondriasis), factitious disorder
DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
→ somatic symptom and related disorder. may have distressing and incapacitating physical symptoms with no clear medical cause
→ trauma- and stressor-related disorders. develop during or after stressful or traumatic life events.
DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
→ obsessive-compulsive and related disorders. e.g., obsessive-compulsive disorder, hoarding disorder, trichotillomania
DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
→ obsessive-compulsive and related disorders. experience repeated and unwanted urges, thoughts, or images (i.e., obsessions) and feel driven to taking repeatedactions in response to them (i.e., compulsion).
DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
→ anxiety disorders. involves focusing on bad or dangerous things that could happen and worrying fearfully and excessively about them.
→ schizophrenia spectrum and other psychotic disorders. psychotic disorders cause detachment from reality. people with these diagnoses experience delusions, hallucinations, and disorganized thinking and speech.
DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
→ depressive disorders. e.g., major depressive disorder, premenstrual dysphoric disorder (i.e., more severe than premenstrual syndrome)
DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
→ depressive disorders. characterized by feelings of extremesadness and worthlessness, along with reduced interest in previously enjoyable activities.
DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
→ bipolar and related disorders. episodes of mania (i.e., excessive excitement, activity, and energy) alternate with periods of depression.
the DSM-5 classification system allows the practitioner to identify all the factors that relate to a person’s condition.
psychosocial and environmental problems that may affect the diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of mental disorders
the DSM-5 classification system allows the practitioner to identify all the factors that relate to a person’s condition.
medicalconditions that are potentially relevant to understanding or managing the person’s mental disorder as well as medical conditions that might contribute to understanding the person