Cheniaux 2009 = two psychiatrists independently diagnose 100 people: one psychiatrist diagnose 26 (DSM) and 44 (ICD), the other diagnose 13 (DSM) and 24 (ICD) - inter-rater reliability was poor therefore diagnoses aren't reliable
Limitation - low validity
Cheniaux 2009 et al = both psychiatrists diagnosed more under ICD - schizophrenia is more likely diagnosed under ICD therefore different assessment systems don't arrive at same diagnosis for same person and schizophrenia is either over-diagnosed in ICD/under-diagnosed in DSM
Limitation - confusing classification and diagnosis
Buckley 2009 = 50% of schizophrenics have depression diagnosis and 47% have substance abuse diagnosis; 29% have PTSD and 23% have OCD - difficulty telling difference between conditions therefore co-morbidity increases confusion
Co-morbidity
two or more conditions occur together
Limitation - symptom overlap
Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder both have delusions and avolition - schizophrenia may be diagnosed under ICD but bipolar disorder may be diagnosed under DSM therefore they may not be two different disorders
Limitation - gender bias diagnosis
Longenecker 2010 = men more often than women diagnosed with schizophrenia since 1980s; Cotton 2009 = women have good family relationships and function better - women under-diagnosed because their interpersonal functioning biases practitioners therefore low internal validity