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DSM-5 中丧亲排除的去除:探索证据。

The removal of the bereavement exclusion in the DSM-5: exploring the evidence.

机构信息

Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr. #9116A, La Jolla, CA, 92093, USA,

出版信息

Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2013 Nov;15(11):413. doi: 10.1007/s11920-013-0413-0.

Abstract

Since 1980, the DSM-III and its various iterations through the DSM-IV-TR have systematically excluded individuals from the diagnosis of major depressive disorder if symptoms began within months after the death of a loved one (2 months in DSM-IV), unless the depressive syndrome was 'severely' impairing and/or accompanied by specific features. This criterion became known as the 'bereavement exclusion'. No other adverse life events were noted to negate the diagnosis of major depressive disorder if all other symptomatic, duration, severity and distress/impairment criteria were met. However, studies since the inception of the bereavement exclusion have shown that depressive syndromes occurring after bereavement share many of the same features as other, non-bereavement related depressions, tend to be chronic and/or recurrent if left untreated, interfere with the resolution of grief, and respond to treatment. Furthermore, the bereavement exclusion has had the unintended consequence of suggesting that grief should end in only 2 months, or that grief and major depressive disorder cannot co-occur. To prevent the denial of diagnosis and the consideration of sometimes much needed care, even after bereavement or other significant losses, the DSM-5 no longer contains the bereavement exclusion. Instead, the DSM-5 now permits the diagnosis of major depressive disorder after and during bereavement and includes a note and a comprehensive footnote in the major depressive episode criteria set to guide clinicians in making the diagnosis in this context. The decision to make this change was widely and publically debated and remains controversial. This article reports on the rationale for this decision and the way the DSM-5 now addresses the challenges of diagnosing major depressive disorder in the context of someone grieving the loss of a loved one.

摘要

自 1980 年以来,DSM-III 及其在 DSM-IV-TR 中的各种迭代版本系统地排除了那些在亲人去世后数月内出现症状的个体(DSM-IV 中为 2 个月),除非抑郁综合征严重受损和/或伴有特定特征。这一标准被称为“丧亲排除”。如果满足所有其他症状、持续时间、严重程度和痛苦/损伤标准,则没有其他负面生活事件被认为可以否定重度抑郁症的诊断。然而,自丧亲排除标准实施以来的研究表明,丧亲后出现的抑郁综合征与其他非丧亲相关的抑郁具有许多相同的特征,如果不治疗,往往会持续存在和/或反复发作,会干扰悲伤的解决,并且对治疗有反应。此外,丧亲排除标准产生了意想不到的后果,即悲伤应该只在 2 个月内结束,或者悲伤和重度抑郁症不能同时存在。为了防止在丧亲或其他重大损失后拒绝诊断和考虑有时非常需要的护理,DSM-5 不再包含丧亲排除标准。相反,DSM-5 现在允许在丧亲和期间诊断重度抑郁症,并在重度抑郁发作标准中包含一个注释和一个全面的脚注,以指导临床医生在这种情况下进行诊断。做出这一改变的决定受到了广泛和公开的辩论,仍然存在争议。本文报告了这一决定的基本原理,以及 DSM-5 现在如何应对在有人哀悼失去亲人的情况下诊断重度抑郁症的挑战。

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