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Psychiatry's catastrophic blindness and what to do about it

 

Members of PACEsConnection, intimately exposed to the pandemic of interpersonal violence, must be especially sensitive to contemporary medicine’s shortcomings. All of us spend most of the time coping. If we are victims of violence or abuse we search for the path towards personal strength, integrity and resilience. If we are therapists we accumulate strategies and tactics to help rebuild shattered souls—one at a time. Few of us have the time, the energy or the interest to explore larger issues of context, culture, policy and tradition.

This post describes a major shortcoming in traditional medical psychiatry which greatly impairs understanding and treatment of the victims of violence—especially child abuse and neglect. The discussion here should be of interest to all members of PACEsConnection. It details a “structural prejudice” which denies and belittles the effects of interpersonal violence, thus retarding understanding and therapeutic progress. This is a wakeup call for all of us to become involved in influencing policy and culture on the broadest scale.

While the House of Medicine sits proudly on a foundation of science, compassion, and efficacy, its construction has a long history of misdirected efforts, rigid dogmatic traditions, and culturally motivated disrespect for important humane values related to race, ethnicity and class. At the present time our community is being especially harmed by the attitudes and dogmas of medical psychiatry that influence the rest of medicine. For generations, clinical understanding of mental illness has been constrained by the symptom complexes described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association (DSM). In fact, in 2009 the National Institute on Mental Health (NIMH) instituted the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework for mental illness research funding as an alternative to the inadequacies of the DSM model. In RDoC, psychiatric illnesses are not defined as discrete categories, but instead as specific behavioral dysfunctions irrespective of DSM diagnostic categories.

This approach was taken because NIMH recognized two primary weaknesses in the DSM: (1) the same symptoms occur in very different DSM defined disease states; and (2) DSM criteria lack grounding in the underlying biological causes of mental illness. RDoC was intended to provide an improved basis for understanding psychiatric pathophysiology and treatment. This reformulation is extremely important for the study and treatment of child abuse and neglect trauma, because in the intervening dozen years there has been no change in psychiatry’s approach or in the DSM.

The DSM-5 attends to child maltreatment trauma only at the end of the volume after defining the accepted diagnostic categories for various mental illnesses, based on symptom complexes.  On page 715, there is a brief section called “Other Conditions That May Be as Focus of Clinical Attention.” It states that the conditions listed there merely affect mental disorders; they are not mental disorders themselves; and they cannot be treated as mental disorders. Thus designated by the DSM-5 coding system, they are not reimbursable by insurance companies. Conditions relegated to this section include Child Physical Abuse, Child Sexual Abuse, Parent-Child Relational Problems, Child Affected by Parental Relationship Distress, Child Psychological Abuse, Spousal Violence, and others. Thus the presence of any of these conditions is rarely specifically coded in a patient’s medical record. This presents a major problem to clinicians who study and treat the effects of child abuse trauma.

We all know adults with a history of abuse who have lived unhappy lives of maladaptive or dysfunctional behaviors that are their symptomatic responses to their trauma rather than a DSM defined mental illness. Seeking psychiatric help, many have been given different formal DSM diagnoses together or in serial over time along with multiple courses of ineffective medications, often complicated by side effects, as their symptoms evolve. Some are dosed with polypharmacy in an attempt to control their behavior without therapeutic benefit. Conversely, some traditional DSM diagnoses, for example, dissociative disorder and borderline personality disorder occur primarily, if not only, in the context of severe child maltreatment trauma. Historically, because of the absence of a DSM category for child maltreatment trauma, certain syndromes, for example, completed or attempted suicide, have been evaluated without attention to a history of child abuse trauma. In other circumstances, for instance, the evaluation of pharmaceutical treatment efficacy for depression or anxiety, the absence of attention to a history of child maltreatment trauma as a confounding or comorbid factor negates the validity of the research.

At the same time, medical psychiatry has placed increasing emphasis on pharmacotherapy and paid little attention to the many nuanced behavioral treatment modalities developed by non-medical therapists. There is good data on how many adults with a history of significant maltreatment turn to drugs or alcohol to manage their distress, but there are no studies of how many alcoholics or heroin addicts have been abused as children. In sum, the DSM paradigm has been a barrier to insight and understanding the mental distress of those who have experienced trauma from abuse or neglect. This impaired perspective impacts all of medical care that generally overlooks the lifelong physical, as well as mental, harms caused by child maltreatment trauma.

Recently, we published in a peer-reviewed professional journal a major paper comprehensively analyzing these problems, as well as pointing out, that abused patients have measurable genetic, genomic, neuro-anatomic, hormonal, and inflammatory changes. We lay out a comprehensive, evidence-based discussion on why a major rethinking and reformulation of the DSM is mandatory. The paper is attached to these introductory comments. Please take the time to read it. (The supplemental essays are material as well.) The PACEs Connection community has a special interest in this paper as it is designed to provide leverage for improving the system and providing better care. Your comments, criticisms, and further insights will be appreciated. I invite, and it is important, for all participants in PACEs Connection to join in to help promote the suggested changes.

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Thank you for sharing your thoughts and journal article, Dr. Gordon. You make a compelling argument for integrating a history of childhood maltreatment (CM) into physical and behavioral medicine models.  For so long physical and mental health have been separated.

(Page 3) Because maltreatment is also a major risk factor for a host of medical disorders including cancer as well as heart, liver, digestive, and respiratory disease [79–81], one can argue that a maltreatment history should be an essential part of everyone’s medical history.

(Page 5)  In addition, being able to specifically diagnose patients with post CM disorders will facilitate identification of the complimentary state— resilience—and catalyze more research into that phenomenon. Heightened attention to CM-associated diagnoses will also better inform public policy and needs to be a critical component in the education and training of mental health professionals.

The medical ship does indeed turn slowly, however, your article provides additional fuel for turning the ship a bit more quickly.

Thank you,
Karen Clemmer

Thanks for the kind words. I look forward to working with PACEsConnections staff and members to motivate the psychiatry association to change the DSM.

Thank you for sharing your thoughts and journal article, Dr. Gordon. You make a compelling argument for integrating a history of childhood maltreatment (CM) into physical and behavioral medicine models.  For so long physical and mental health have been separated.

(Page 3) Because maltreatment is also a major risk factor for a host of medical disorders including cancer as well as heart, liver, digestive, and respiratory disease [79–81], one can argue that a maltreatment history should be an essential part of everyone’s medical history.

(Page 5)  In addition, being able to specifically diagnose patients with post CM disorders will facilitate identification of the complimentary state— resilience—and catalyze more research into that phenomenon. Heightened attention to CM-associated diagnoses will also better inform public policy and needs to be a critical component in the education and training of mental health professionals.

The medical ship does indeed turn slowly, however, your article provides additional fuel for turning the ship a bit more quickly.

Thank you,
Karen Clemmer

I worked on the only 'Patient-Governed Ward' at our State Hospital late 1979-80. We had a Family Physician assigned in lieu of a Psychiatrist. The family doc directed that a patient- a former school teacher who had trouble teaching a sex-ed curriculum item just before she was hospitalized-not have unsupervised visits with her father-(who had sexually abused her during here childhood). Apparently the family doc didn't concur with the DSM about Incest.

Turning the ship of medicine takes a long time and much energy. Thanks for your insight and support.

I don't remember which book I read quoting the DSM in the 1980's " Incest will not impact the victims life. It will prepare them for the life they about to live." Their change is slow.

I believe ACEs represents the protest against the conformity to a life we are lead to believe is ours.

I worked on the only 'Patient-Governed Ward' at our State Hospital late 1979-80. We had a Family Physician assigned in lieu of a Psychiatrist. The family doc directed that a patient- a former school teacher who had trouble teaching a sex-ed curriculum item just before she was hospitalized-not have unsupervised visits with her father-(who had sexually abused her during here childhood). Apparently the family doc didn't concur with the DSM about Incest.

A part of the book notes that policies take a couple of decades to be put into place, with the implication that policies that aren't considered for that long, such as the policies behind our broken child welfare system were put together in haste, to the detriment of many.

THANK YOU for your note on the book,  you might find some supportive commentary by the "Bioloogical Anthropologists, too> Jane!

Last edited by Robert Olcott

A part of the book notes that policies take a couple of decades to be put into place, with the implication that policies that aren't considered for that long, such as the policies behind our broken child welfare system were put together in haste, to the detriment of many.

Maybe not!! At your suggestion, Jeoff, I'm reading Abusive Policies by Mical Raz. AMAZING book! I just started Chapter 4, so haven't looked at her suggestions on how to fix CPS.

AH yes! We are all a little wiser if we pay attention to history!

It was surprising to me that President Wilson, seeking favor with newly empowered suffragettes, twice passed child labor laws, but had then ruled unconstitutional by the US Supreme Court twice! Prohibitions and limitations on child labor did not become law until 1938 under FDR.

Maybe not!! At your suggestion, Jeoff, I'm reading Abusive Policies by Mical Raz. AMAZING book! I just started Chapter 4, so haven't looked at her suggestions on how to fix CPS.

I was just on an ambulance call where a 7 year old was semi conscious. What had happened was an over load of the child's system from turmoil at the dinner table. An argument pursued and one of the parents left the house in anger. The child simply checked out. As I tried to explain childhood maltreatment to one of the parents, I received the response "There is no right or wrong way to parent."

Time for a CPS or DPH referral!

     I remember when a Family Practice Resident Physician told me that our local Blue Cross/Blue Shield Board of Directors had voted to lower the Per Patient/Per Bed/Per Day Reimbursement Rate for the one hospital hosting the Family Practice Residency program $2-$3 LESS THAN ALL the rest of the hospitals affiliated with the medical school in the BC/BS area, just about the time the National Health Planning and Resources Development Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-641) took effect, with it's mandate of "Consumer Majorities".

     I subsequently moved to another state, where I later 'Re-Upped' for another term in VISTA/Americorps where I was tasked with ensuring the provisions for informed/empowered "Consumer Majorities" (specifically: Low-Income and Elderly [Health Care Consumers] under the 1974 National Health Planning...Act - - where you couldn't be a 'Consumer representative' if more than 10% of your income came from a health related source, or if you were married to a provider, or if you were an 'Indirect Provider'-such as an EMT of Dental Hygienist.....until the Reagan administration 'gutted' the funding for that type of 'government-mandated Citizen Participation'. Before that occurred, we were fortunate enough to have also had [federal] Regional Technical Assistance centers, such as the Western Center for Health Planning- which availed a printed guide: "Is Your Health Plan Readable?"-offering strategies for "Readability Analysis" of Newsletters and other publications.

     As an adjunct to Jeoffrey Gordon's post, perhaps we need to reinstate those 'Consumer Majorities' on a national scale, considering the World Health Organization's development of the 'WHO ACE International Questionnaire' - which it used for its study of the World's Healthiest Children [the USA ranked only 25th]...the Netherlands, with its 'Resilience Building' famed story of 'The Dutch Boy who put his finger in the Dike' and prevented flooding' was number one.

Well said. Really what we need as all members of PACEsConnection to work together as a community to impact public policy concerning effective parenting, interpersonal violence and child maltreatment!

"The magnitude of the problem is so enormous and treatment approaches are so difficult and costly that you can spend the rest of your life becoming the next Mother Teresa or Albert Schweitzer and you'll be so busy helping people that you'll never notice you're just nibbling at the edges of the problem leaving the vast bulk unrecognized and untouched.  So if anything meaningful is to come out of this it's going to be coming out of what we call primary prevention..."  Dr. Vincent Felitti

****************************************************************************

"If you were to ask me what my thoughts are on the most effective public health advance that I can think of in current times, I would say to figure out how to improve parenting skills across the nation."  Dr. Vincent Felitti

****************************************************************************

“If we could somehow end child abuse and neglect, the eight hundred pages of the DSM...would be shrunk to a pamphlet in two generations.”  Dr. John Briere

I was just on an ambulance call where a 7 year old was semi conscious. What had happened was an over load of the child's system from turmoil at the dinner table. An argument pursued and one of the parents left the house in anger. The child simply checked out. As I tried to explain childhood maltreatment to one of the parents, I received the response "There is no right or wrong way to parent." 

With regard to 'Parenting Education', our local [Connecticut River valley of the twin-state Vt./N.H.] newspaper "Valley News" publishes a "Parenting" supplement on a quarterly basis- which may be available on their website (www.vnews.com).

     I remember when a Family Practice Resident Physician told me that our local Blue Cross/Blue Shield Board of Directors had voted to lower the Per Patient/Per Bed/Per Day Reimbursement Rate for the one hospital hosting the Family Practice Residency program $2-$3 LESS THAN ALL the rest of the hospitals affiliated with the medical school in the BC/BS area, just about the time the National Health Planning and Resources Development Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-641) took effect, with it's mandate of "Consumer Majorities".

     I subsequently moved to another state, where I later 'Re-Upped' for another term in VISTA/Americorps where I was tasked with ensuring the provisions for informed/empowered "Consumer Majorities" (specifically: Low-Income and Elderly [Health Care Consumers] under the 1974 National Health Planning...Act - - where you couldn't be a 'Consumer representative' if more than 10% of your income came from a health related source, or if you were married to a provider, or if you were an 'Indirect Provider'-such as an EMT of Dental Hygienist.....until the Reagan administration 'gutted' the funding for that type of 'government-mandated Citizen Participation'. Before that occurred, we were fortunate enough to have also had [federal] Regional Technical Assistance centers, such as the Western Center for Health Planning- which availed a printed guide: "Is Your Health Plan Readable?"-offering strategies for "Readability Analysis" of Newsletters and other publications.

     As an adjunct to Jeoffrey Gordon's post, perhaps we need to reinstate those 'Consumer Majorities' on a national scale, considering the World Health Organization's development of the 'WHO ACE International Questionnaire' - which it used for its study of the World's Healthiest Children [the USA ranked only 25th]...the Netherlands, with its 'Resilience Building' famed story of 'The Dutch Boy who put his finger in the Dike' and prevented flooding' was number one.

Sorry I merely copied the email address you gave and pasted it into my browser. I did it again and it will not work. I look forward to chatting with you but do not know what to do. You can email  me directly at paradocs21@gmail.com. JBG

I don't remember which book I read quoting the DSM in the 1980's " Incest will not impact the victims life. It will prepare them for the life they about to live." Their change is slow.

I believe ACEs represents the protest against the conformity to a life we are lead to believe is ours.

Dr. Gordon...you wrote, "Parenting education is really, really important and could be very helpful, but inevitably it only reaches a relatively few families who need it."

Are you referring to conventional parenting education...the kind that happens in a classroom or office?  If you are you are absolutely correct.

I'm talking about a new kind of parenting education that reaches everyone, everywhere.

This new kind of parenting education doesn't exist yet...with one exception.

Please be so kind as to describe the exceptional approach to parenting education. If is working I am all for it. My preference is that I still thinks societal change will have more preventive impact - for example President Biden's child subsidy payments.

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