Monday, November 12, 2007

blithe assumptions

So, I did a little perusing of the personality disorders section of the DSM, and I was amazed by some of the language that I found there. Linehan's article ought to have tipped me off, but it wasn't just the description of borderline personality disorder that used pejorative language and descriptions that were "confound[ed] [by] motivational hypothes[es]" (p. 14). Here's a sampling (all italics mine):

Histrionic Personality Disorder-

"they commandeer the role of 'the life of the party'"

"their emotions often seem to be turned on and off
too quickly to be deeply felt"

"they often act out a role (e.g.,
"victim" or "princess") in their relationships"

"seek to control their partner through
emotional manipulation or seductiveness"

"at increased risk for suicidal gestures and threats
to get attention and coerce better caregiving"

Narcissistic Personality Disorder--

"they may blithely assume that others attribute the same value to their efforts..."

"sense of entitlement"

"contemptuous and impatient"

"Arrogant, haughty behaviors characterize these individuals. They often display snobbish, disdainful, or patronizing attitudes"

"very sensitive to
"injury" from criticism or defeat"

"
overweening ambition"

"[differs from] Histrionic, Antisocial, and Borderline Personality Disorders, whose interactive styles are respectively
coquettish, callous, and needy..."

Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder
"oblivious to the fact that other people tend to become very annoyed"

"
stubbornly and unreasonably insist that everything be done their way"

"Individuals with this disorder may be
miserly and stingy"
The language used to describe these individuals is certainly not scientific or objective; rather, it's the kind of subjective, emotional language you might use to describe anyone you didn't like. The diagnostic criteria seem more to be criteria for unlikeableness (if that's even a word) than impaired functioning and clinically significant distress. If this is the best we can do, it's no wonder a large portion of the world describes us as "quacks" and "shrinks." No meaningful therapeutic progress can be made if the clinician conceives of their client in such pejorative terms and ascribes motives to their behaviors (i.e., rapid fluctuations in expressed emotion) that may, in fact, have more to do with our cultural "common sense" about what such behaviors mean (i.e., "turned on and off too quickly to be felt"), and less about their actual origin and function (perhaps limbic dysregulation?).

Frankly, this section of the DSM seems like a holdover from the dark ages, and I'm horrified by the pseudoscientific veneer it lays over highly subjective diagnostic categories. After all, how is a clinician to operationally define, say, "fishing for compliments" (a behavior described in both the Histrionic and the Narcissistic sections)? Or, taking a look at the actual criteria , how is one to pinpoint which emotions are "shallow" (Histrionic)? How can different clinicians all arrive at the same definition of what is "theatrical" (Histrionic) or "haughty" (Narcissistic) or "perfectionis[tic]" (Obsessive-Compulsive)?

Furthermore, is a category of personality disorders even helpful? Defining these diagnoses as disorders of the personality suggests disorders of intrinsic, relatively stable traits; it implies resistance to treatment. If a clinician diagnoses a client as having avoidant personality disorder, it seems that there's little that can be done--her very
personality is disordered! Yet give the same individual a label of social phobia, and it seems, instead, that change can be effected--the phobia can be tackled.

So, in all, this whole category has me steamed.

1 comment:

jcoan said...

Axis II gets me steamed too. And check this out:

Hartung, C. M., & Widiger, T. A. (1998). Gender differences in the diagnosis of mental disorders: Conclusions and controversies of the DSM-IV. Psychological Bulletin, 123, 260-278

Here's the problem: Some people really are socially weird. Moreover, being weird can leave them lonely and friendless, unable to find or hold a job, and deeply, desperately unhappy. Often, these social weirdnesses really are quite stable across situations, much as you'd expect from an enduring trait, and often they really are quite resistant to treatment. Thus, the idea of personality disorders, per se seems reasonable to me, even if they are not particularly reliable as diagnostic categories. So, maybe it's just the particular nosology that is a problem. I don't know, but in either case, I prefer to think of individuals with social weirdnesses as, well, individuals with social weirdnesses. As opposed to, say, "borderlines" or "histrionics." A lot of the time, or so it seems to me, these kinds of disorders are pretty reducible to specific behaviors that are off-putting, and that can be shaped to be different with smart, intensive therapy. We'll talk more during class.