Psychiatry Reporting - Classification in Psychiatry
Psychiatry Reporting - Classification in Psychiatry
Psychiatry Reporting - Classification in Psychiatry
PSYCHIATRY
ANESCO, Carlo G.
ANGELES, Maria Veronica R.
ANTENOR, Armary Ruth C.
ASISTORES, Marie Aileen C.
ASUNCION, Reynaldo Raul N.
BARDELOSA, Justine Grace M.
BESANA, Mark Anthony B.
BONDOC, Angelo James F.
BUCAG, Arcelie T.
BUMANLAG, Exene Keisha G.
Section 3C
PURPOSE OF CLASSIFICATION
To distinguish one psychiatric diagnosis from another
To provide a common language among health care professionals
To explore the still unknown causes of many mental disorders
HISTORY
Hippocrates - introduced the terms mania and hysteria as forms of mental illness in the
fifth century BC
1869 - first US classification was introduced at the annual meeting of the American
Medico-Psychological Association
1952 - the American Psychiatric Association’s Committee on Nomenclature and
Statistics published the first edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders - I (DSM - I)
DSM-5 CLASSIFICATION
Lists 22 major categories of mental disorders, comprising more than 150 discrete
illnesses
developed by the American Psychiatric Association in collaboration with other groups of
mental health professionals
official psychiatric coding system used in United States
was designed to correspond to the 10th revision of ICD-10, first developed in 1992
ICD-10
developed by the World Health Organization
official classification system used in Europe and many other parts of the world
All categories used in DSM-5 are found in ICD-10 but not all ICD-10 categories are in
DSM-5.
1. Descriptive Approach
DSM-5 attempts to describe the manifestations of the mental disorders and only rarely
attempts to account for how disturbances come about
2. Diagnostic Criteria
specified diagnostic criteria are provided for each specific mental disorder
These criteria include a list of features that must be present for the diagnosis to be made
increase the reliability of the diagnostic process
3. Systematic Description
- Laboratory findings and associated physical examination signs and symptoms are also
described when they are relevant
DSM-5 Classification
To assist trained clinicians in the diagnosis of their patients' mental disorders as part
of a case formulation assessment that leads to a fully informed treatment plan for
each individual.
1. Neurodevelopmental Disorders
4. Depressive Disorders
5. Anxiety Disorders
8. Dissociative Disorders
1. NEURODEVELOPMENTAL
- The disorders typically manifest early in development, often before the child enters
grade school, and are characterized by developmental deficits that produce impairments of
personal, social, academic, or occupational functioning.
● Intellectual disability
● Communication disorder
● ADHD
● Delusions
● Hallucinations
- A bridge between the two diagnostic classes (schizo and depressive) in terms of
symptomatology, family history, and genetics. Patients with both manic and depressive
episodes or manic episode alone.
● Bipolar I disorder
● Bipolar II disorder
● Cyclothymic disorder
● Substance/medication-induced
4. DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS
- The common feature of all of these disorders is the presence of sad, empty, or irritable
mood, accompanied by somatic and cognitive changes that significantly affect the
individual's capacity to function.
- What differs among them are issues of duration, timing, or presumed etiology.
5. ANXIETY DISORDERS
- disorders that share features of excessive fear and anxiety and related behavioral
disturbances.
a. FEAR
- emotional response to real or perceived imminent threat
- more often associated with surges of autonomic arousal necessary for fight or flight,
thoughts of immediate danger, and escape behaviors
b. ANXIETY
- more often associated with muscle tension and vigilance in preparation for future
danger and cautious or avoidant behaviors; anticipation of future threat
c. PANIC ATTACKS
a. OBSESSIONS
- recurrent and persistent thoughts, urges, or images that are experienced as intrusive
and unwanted
b. COMPULSIONS
- Stressor is the prime causative factor in the development of PTSD. It involves an intense
fear or horror. The most prominent clinical characteristics are:
● Dissociative symptoms.
● Adjustment disorders
8. DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS
● Dissociative amnesia
● Depersonalization/Derealization disorder
- Individuals with medical complaints that have no physical cause. “All in your head”
● Factitious Disorder
● Pica
● Rumination disorder
● Anorexia nervosa
● Bulimia nervosa
● Binge-eating disorder
- Involve the inappropriate elimination of urine or feces and are usually first diagnosed in
childhood or adolescence.
a. Enuresis
b. Encopresis
● Insomnia disorder
● Hypersomnolence disorder
● Narcolepsy
○ Sleep-related Hypoventilation
● Delayed ejaculation
● Erectile disorder
● Premature/early ejaculation
- These problems are manifested in behaviors that violate the rights of others (e.g.,
aggression, destruction of property) and/or that bring the individual into significant conflict with
societal norms or authority figures.
● Conduct disorder
● Pyromania
● Kleptomania
16. SUBSTANCE RELATED AND ADDICTIVE DISORDERS - They produce such an intense
activation of the reward system that normal activities may be neglected.
● Alcohol
● Caffeine
● Cannabis
● Hallucinogens
● Inhalants
● Opioids
● Sedatives
● Hypnotics
● Anxiolytics
● Tobacco
● Dementia
● Delirium
● Amnestic
- An enduring pattern of inner experience and behavior that deviates markedly from
the expectations of the individual's culture, is pervasive and inflexible, has an onset in
adolescence or early adulthood, is stable over time, and leads to distress or impairment.
a. Voyeuristic disorder
c. Frotteuristic disorder
f. Pedophilic disorder
g. Fetishistic disorder
- using nonliving objects or having a highly specific focus on nongenital body parts
h. Transvestic disorder
- It consist of diagnosis codes and will be used in all settings by all providers.
ICD-9-CM Codes
ICD-10-CM Codes
- Up to 7 characters long
F00-F09
- This block comprises a range of mental disorders grouped on the basis of their common,
demonstrable etiology in CEREBRAL DISEASE, BRAIN INJURY, or insult leading to
CEREBRAL DYSFUNCTION.
F10-F19
F20-F29
- This block forms a heterogenous and poorly understood collection of disorders, which
can conveniently be divided according to their typical duration into a group of persistent
delusional disorders and a larger group of acute and transient psychotic disorders.
F30-F39
F40-F48
- Brought together because of their historical association with the concept of neurosis and
of a substantial proportion of these disorders with psychological causation.