My impression is that the âmedicalizationâ of âordinaryâ human feelings gets a lot of criticism from writers on every part of the political spectrum, but I donât know whether an expert perspective might show these definitions to actually be beneficial.
PTSD seems like a reasonably good case of a definition being helpful, while counterpoints may include ADHD and Oppositional Defiant Disorder (based on complaints Iâve read; I donât personally have an opinion on whether those diagnostic categories are net-positive). This isnât to say that people diagnosed with ADHD shouldnât have medication available to them; instead, some writers argue that children are often diagnosed and overmedicated as a result of behavior that comes standard in humans of that age.
As for your question: What are conditions that can be helped by legal medicine or therapy that arenât currently covered by existing diagnoses? Nothing springs immediately to mind for me, though I wouldnât be surprised if there are major gaps Iâm not aware of.
Your example, âordinary human unhappinessâ, seems like it wouldnât respond very well to medication unless it was already classifiable as minor depression. Is there evidence that antidepressants improve the well-being of people without depression?
Grief was previously considered different from depression, but with the DSM-5 itâs no longer a reason to rule out a depression diagnosis. Itâs unclear how much antidepressants help with grief (and people have mixed feelings about whether medical treatment for grief is appropriate).
My impression is that the âmedicalizationâ of âordinaryâ human feelings gets a lot of criticism from writers on every part of the political spectrum, but I donât know whether an expert perspective might show these definitions to actually be beneficial.
PTSD seems like a reasonably good case of a definition being helpful, while counterpoints may include ADHD and Oppositional Defiant Disorder (based on complaints Iâve read; I donât personally have an opinion on whether those diagnostic categories are net-positive). This isnât to say that people diagnosed with ADHD shouldnât have medication available to them; instead, some writers argue that children are often diagnosed and overmedicated as a result of behavior that comes standard in humans of that age.
As for your question: What are conditions that can be helped by legal medicine or therapy that arenât currently covered by existing diagnoses? Nothing springs immediately to mind for me, though I wouldnât be surprised if there are major gaps Iâm not aware of.
Your example, âordinary human unhappinessâ, seems like it wouldnât respond very well to medication unless it was already classifiable as minor depression. Is there evidence that antidepressants improve the well-being of people without depression?
Grief was previously considered different from depression, but with the DSM-5 itâs no longer a reason to rule out a depression diagnosis. Itâs unclear how much antidepressants help with grief (and people have mixed feelings about whether medical treatment for grief is appropriate).