dsm-5

Cards (46)

  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    other mental 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.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    → disruptive, impulse-control, and conduct disorder. e.g., kleptomania, intermittent explosive disorder
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    disruptive, impulse-control, and conduct disorder. e.g., kleptomania, intermittent explosive disorder
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    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.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    neurodevelopmental disorder. e.g., attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, autism spectrum disorder, learning disorder
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    → neurodevelopmental disorder. usually begin in infancy or childhood, often before a child starts school.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    neurocognitive disorder. e.g., traumatic brain injury, Alzheimer’s disease
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    → neurocognitive disorder. affect people’s ability to think and reason; includes delirium.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    gender dysphoria. stem from distress that goes with a person’s stated desire to be a different gender.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    paraphilic disorders. e.g., sexual sadism disorder, voyeuristic disorder, pedophilic disorder
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    paraphilic disorders. many sexual-interest disorders are included.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    sexual dysfunctions. e.g., premature ejaculation, erectile disorder, female orgasmic disorder
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    sexual dysfunctions. disorders of sexual response.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    sleep-wake disorders. e.g., insomnia, nightmare disorder, sleep apnea, restless legs syndrome
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    sleep-wake disorders. severe sleep disorders.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    elimination disorders. e.g., enuresis
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    elimination disorders. relates to the inappropriate elimination of urine or stool by accident or on purpose.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    eating and feeding disorders. disturbances related to eating.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    eating and feeding disorders. e.g., anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    personality disorders. e.g., borderline personality disorder, antisocial, narcissistic personality disorder
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    → personality disorders. involves a lasting pattern of emotional instability and unhealthy behaviors 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
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    dissociative disorders. e.g., dissociative identity disorder, dissociative amnesia
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    → dissociative disorders. e.g., dissociative identity disorder, dissociative amnesia
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    dissociative disorders. a person’s sense of self is disrupted.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    trauma- and stressor-related disorders. e.g., posttraumatic stress disorder, acute stress disorder
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    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 repeated actions 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.
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness→ anxiety disorders. e.g., generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, phobias
  • DSM-5 Classification of Mental Illness
    → 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 extreme sadness 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.
    • medical conditions 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