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Celebrating Abilities Inc. started as a support group located in southwest Florida for parents of children with different abilities. We are no longer active as a group because we've all moved on to other areas of the United States. I've decided to keep the blog active so that information can be shared with our loyal families and some new ones, too.

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Thursday, May 27, 2010

Proposed Diagnostic Change Not Enough To Help Children Currently Diagnosed With Bipolar Disorder


 Proposed Diagnostic Change Not Enough To Help Children Currently Diagnosed With Bipolar DisorderMay 19, 2010  
(Garrison, NY) Shifting children from the controversial diagnosis of bipolar disorder to one that more accurately reflects their symptoms will not by itself decrease the rate of psychopharmacologic treatment and is not enough to help troubled children flourish, according to a commentary in the New England Journal of Medicine by researchers at The Hastings Center, a bioethics research institute, and a physician-researcher at Stony Brook University School of Medicine.

A new diagnostic category for troubled children called Temper Dysregulation Disorder with Dysphoria (TDD), which would to a considerable extent replace the diagnosis of bipolar disorder in children, is one of the most talked-about features of recently released draft revisions to the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). The new diagnosis would focus on negative mood and temper outbursts as their own symptoms, rather than as indications of mania or other elevated mood symptoms associated with bipolar disorder.

The proposal of a new category suggests that the dramatic increase in the number of children diagnosed with bipolar disorder is not appropriate. But "will the TDD diagnosis promote the ultimate goal of psychiatric classification: helping troubled children to flourish?" ask Erik Parens, senior research scholar at The Hastings Center; Josephine Johnston, research scholar at The Hastings Center; and Gabrielle A. Carlson, Director of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at Stony Brook University School of Medicine. The answer is no, "unless we get serious about reforming pediatric mental health care," the authors write in an essay, "Pediatric Mental Health Care Dysfunction Disorder?"

"No existing DSM diagnosis conveys the appropriate severity and complexity of these children's moods and behaviors; the 'bipolar disorder' label was meant to provide a home for children who were diagnostically homeless," according to the authors. "The dispute has been about whether bipolar disorder is the right diagnostic home."
 
To read more, please visit: http://www.physorg.com/news193493276.html

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