Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychiatry, University of Basel, Missionsstrasse 60-64, Basel, Switzerland.
J Consult Clin Psychol. 2012 Feb;80(1):128-38. doi: 10.1037/a0026582. Epub 2011 Dec 26.
Unresolved questions exist concerning diagnosis of ADHD. First, some studies suggest a potential overdiagnosis. Second, compared with the male-female ratio in the general population (3:1), many more boys receive ADHD treatment compared with girls (6-9:1). We hypothesized that this occurs because therapists do not adhere to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed.; DSM-IV) and International Classification of Diseases (10th rev.; ICD-10) criteria. Instead, we hypothesized that, in accordance with the representativeness heuristic, therapists might diagnose attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) if a patient resembles their concept of a prototypical ADHD child, leading therapists to overlook certain exclusion criteria. This may result in overdiagnosis. Furthermore, as ADHD is more frequent in males, a boy might be seen as a more prototypical ADHD child and might therefore receive an ADHD diagnosis more readily than a girl would.
We sent a case vignette to 1,000 child psychologists, psychiatrists, and social workers and asked them to give a diagnosis. Four versions of the vignette existed: Vignette 1 (ADHD) fulfilled all DSM-IV/ICD-10 criteria of ADHD. Vignettes 2-4 (non-ADHD) included several ADHD symptoms but stated other ADHD criteria were nonfulfilled. Therefore, an ADHD diagnosis could not be given. Furthermore, boy and girl versions of each vignette were created.
In Vignettes 2-4 (non-ADHD), 16.7% of therapists diagnosed ADHD. In the boy version of these vignettes, therapists diagnosed ADHD around 2 times more than they did with the girl vignettes.
Therapists do not adhere strictly to diagnostic manuals. Our study suggests that overdiagnosis of ADHD occurs in clinical routine and that the patient's gender influences diagnosis considerably. Thorough diagnostic training might help therapists to avoid these biases.
关于 ADHD 的诊断仍存在一些悬而未决的问题。首先,一些研究表明存在潜在的过度诊断。其次,与一般人群中的男女比例(3:1)相比,接受 ADHD 治疗的男孩比女孩多(6-9:1)。我们假设这是因为治疗师没有遵守《精神障碍诊断与统计手册》(第 4 版;DSM-IV)和《国际疾病分类》(第 10 修订版;ICD-10)标准。相反,我们假设,根据代表性启发式,治疗师可能会诊断注意力缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD),如果患者与他们对典型 ADHD 儿童的概念相似,这可能导致治疗师忽略某些排除标准。这可能导致过度诊断。此外,由于 ADHD 在男性中更为常见,男孩可能被视为更典型的 ADHD 儿童,因此比女孩更容易被诊断为 ADHD。
我们向 1000 名儿童心理学家、精神科医生和社会工作者发送了一份病例简述,并要求他们做出诊断。该病例简述有四个版本:简述 1(ADHD)符合 ADHD 的所有 DSM-IV/ICD-10 标准。简述 2-4(非 ADHD)包含几个 ADHD 症状,但表示其他 ADHD 标准未得到满足。因此,不能做出 ADHD 诊断。此外,为每个简述创建了男孩和女孩版本。
在简述 2-4(非 ADHD)中,有 16.7%的治疗师诊断为 ADHD。在这些简述的男孩版本中,治疗师诊断 ADHD 的次数是女孩版本的两倍左右。
治疗师没有严格遵守诊断手册。我们的研究表明,ADHD 的过度诊断在临床实践中确实存在,并且患者的性别对诊断有很大影响。彻底的诊断培训可能有助于治疗师避免这些偏见。