Substantial evidence has accumulated that suggest major changes to how mental illness is classified.

TOP INSIGHT
In the assessment of mental disorders, the HiTOP approach accounts for information on shared genetic vulnerabilities, environmental risk factors, and neurobiological abnormalities.
But this approach also has been controversial, as it focuses heavily on neurobiology and much less on investigating issues that are important for everyday psychiatric care, such as prognosis about illness course and selection of treatment. As researcher Robert Krueger explained it, the DSM can be challenging to use in everyday practice. "It’s Byzantine," he said. "It’s like the U.S. tax code. You can get lost in the complexity of its contents and still not find a compelling or accurate way to conceptualize your patient." "The HiTOP system has been articulated to address the limitations currently plaguing psychiatric diagnosis," said lead author Roman Kotov.
"First, the system proposes to view mental disorders as spectra. Second, the HiTOP system uses empirical evidence to understand overlap among these disorders and classify different presentations of patients with a given disorder." Overall, the authors emphasize that HiTOP adheres to the most up-to-date scientific evidence, rather than relying largely on decisions by committee (the approach used to construct the DSM-5).
In the assessment of mental disorders, the HiTOP approach accounts for information on shared genetic vulnerabilities, environmental risk factors, and neurobiological abnormalities, such as differences in brain activity between the patients and healthy individuals. The study is published in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology.
Source-ANI
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